What are Slippage, Swap and Spread in Forex?

If you are thinking of starting Forex trading or are a beginner, you may be confused by terms like “spread”, “swap” and “slippage”. All three of these terms are related to hidden fees and trade execution, which directly affect your profit/loss.

In this blog,

 explain step by step:

  • What is spread and how is it calculated
  • What are spread fees
  • What is slippage and how to avoid it

Explanation with real examples

spread, slippage, swap

1. What is spread?

Spread is the difference between the bid price and the ask price.

๐Ÿ” Bid price

This is the price at which the broker is willing to buy a currency from you.

๐Ÿ” Ask price

This is the price at which the broker is willing to sell a currency to you.

Spread = Ask Price โ€“ Bid Price

๐Ÿงฎ Example:

If EUR/USD:

Bid Price = 1.1000

Ask Price = 1.1002

Then Spread = 2 pips

This means that when you open a trade, your trade starts with a loss of 2 pips – this is the broker’s commission.


Types of Spreads

1. Fixed Spread

The spread is always the same (for example, 2 pips)

It is fixed, especially in markets with low volatility

Most market maker brokers offer it

2. Floating Spread

Changes depending on market conditions

Can increase volatility

ECN/STP brokers offer it


Key points about spreads Points

PointExplanation
Currency PairMajor pairs (EUR/USD, GBP/USD) have low spreads
Time of DaySpreads can increase in volatile markets (news time)
Account TypeECN accounts have low spreads but charge additional commissions

2. What is a swap?

A swap or rollover fee is an overnight interest that you have to pay or receive to keep your trade open until the next day.

   Swap = Interest rate difference between two currencies

Each currency has its own interest rate (depending on the central bank). When you buy one currency and sell another, the difference between the two interest rates is calculated.

โœ… Positive swap

You earn interest

โŒ Negative swap

You have to pay interest


3. What is slippage?

When your order is not executed at the price you clicked but moves slightly higher or lower due to high volatility or execution delay.

๐Ÿงฎ Example:

You placed a buy order at 1.1000

But the order was executed at 1.1003 โ†’ 3 pip slippage


Types of Slippage

โœ… Positive Slippage:

Your order was executed at a good price (profit)

โŒ Negative Slippage:

Your order was executed at a bad price (loss)


Why does slippage occur?

High volatility (news time)

– Such as non-farm payrolls, Fed rate decisions, etc.

– The price moves so fast that the order is not filled at the right point

Low liquidity

– Where there are few buyers and sellers

Slow internet/execution lag

– Platform response is delayed


How to avoid slippage?

TipExplanation
Avoid newsDo not trade during high impact news
Choose an ECN brokerOffers fast execution
Place limit ordersIncreased slippage in market orders.

Real life scenario summary

TermMeaningAffects What?
SpreadBuy-Sell price differenceTrade Entry Cost
SwapOvernight interest feeTrade holding
SlippageUnexpected execution priceTrade Accuracy

โ“ Frequently asked questions

Question 1. Do all brokers charge the same spread?

Answer: No. Each broker’s spread is different depending on the account type and liquidity providers.

Question 2. Can swaps be avoided?

Answer: Yes, you become an intraday trader or choose a swap-free account.

Question 3. Can slippage be avoided completely?

Answer: Complete control is not possible, but you can minimize it with smart planning.

What are spread, swap and slippage in Forex

๐Ÿงพ Conclusion

Profit/loss in Forex trading does not depend solely on price movement – spreads, swaps, and slippage also play a big role.

Spreads are your entry-level costs

Swaps are your holding costs or rewards

Slippage is your execution surprise

If you plan with these three factors in mind, your trading experience can be more stable and profitable.

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