A micro lot is 1/100th the size of a standard lot. In forex, that means each pip is worth $0.10 instead of $10. This difference determines whether a given account size can trade with proper risk management — or is forced to oversize from the start.
Lot Size Hierarchy: Forex
| Lot Type | Size (units) | Pip Value (EUR/USD) | Min Account (1% risk, 50-pip stop) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nano (0.001) | 100 units | $0.01/pip | $50 |
| Micro (0.01) | 1,000 units | $0.10/pip | $500 |
| Mini (0.10) | 10,000 units | $1.00/pip | $5,000 |
| Standard (1.00) | 100,000 units | $10.00/pip | $50,000 |
| 2 Standard (2.00) | 200,000 units | $20.00/pip | $100,000 |
The minimum account column shows the balance needed to risk exactly 1% per trade with a 50-pip stop. A trader with $10,000 using 1 standard lot at a 50-pip stop risks $500 — 5% of the account, 5× the intended risk.
Contract Size Hierarchy: Futures
| Contract | Instrument | Tick Value | Effective Account (1% risk, 8-tick stop ES) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Micro (MES) | E-mini S&P 500 | $1.25/tick | $1,000 |
| Micro (MNQ) | E-mini Nasdaq | $0.50/tick | $400 |
| Full (ES) | E-mini S&P 500 | $12.50/tick | $10,000 |
| Full (NQ) | E-mini Nasdaq | $5.00/tick | $4,000 |
1 full contract = 10 micro contracts in equivalent exposure. The math scales cleanly.
When to Use Micro Lots (Forex)
Micro lots (0.01) are appropriate when:
-
Account balance is under $5,000 — this is the primary use case. A $2,000 account at 1% risk ($20) with a 40-pip stop: Lot Size = $20 ÷ (40 × $10) = 0.05 lots (5 micro lots)
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Learning to trade — real money but small enough that losses don’t cause financial stress
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Testing a new strategy — minimum viable real-money test without significant exposure
-
Funded account demo preparation — practice the sizing discipline at scaled-down dollar amounts
Micro lots are NOT appropriate when:
- Your account is above $10,000 and micro lots produce dollar P&L that’s psychologically irrelevant
- You need to run 50+ micro positions to achieve 1% risk (impractical order management)
When to Use Standard Lots (Forex)
Standard lots (1.00) are appropriate when:
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Account balance is above $50,000 — at 1% risk ($500) with a 50-pip stop: 1 standard lot exactly
-
Funded account at $50,000+ — funded traders at this level use standard lots as their primary unit
-
Institutional or semi-professional trading — where large dollar P&L per pip is required
Standard lots are NOT appropriate for:
- Accounts under $25,000 (most stops produce excessive risk at 1 lot)
- Learning traders — the dollar swings at full lot sizing create emotional decision-making
The In-Between: Mini Lots (0.10)
Mini lots (0.10 = 10,000 units, $1/pip) are the most practical size for accounts between $5,000 and $25,000. They provide:
- Meaningful dollar P&L ($1–$10 per pip depending on stop)
- Sufficient precision for 1% risk sizing
- Lower psychological pressure than standard lots
$10,000 account, 1% risk ($100), 50-pip stop:
Lot Size = $100 ÷ (50 × $10) = 0.20 lots = 2 mini lots
Precision Sizing: Mixing Lot Sizes
The cleanest risk targeting uses a mix of lot sizes. For example, a $15,000 account at 1% risk ($150) with a 40-pip stop:
Lot Size = $150 ÷ (40 × $10) = 0.375 lots
Exact 0.375 rounds to 0.38 (if broker supports it) or:
- 3 mini lots (0.30) = $120 risk (0.8% — acceptable)
- 3 mini + 7 micro lots (0.37) = $148 risk (0.99% — very close)
Most brokers support 0.01 lot increments, allowing near-perfect targeting.
Moving from Micro to Standard: The Progression
| Account Stage | Lot Type | Typical Position | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| $500–$2,000 | Micro (0.01–0.05) | 0.02–0.05 lots | Only option at 1% risk |
| $2,000–$10,000 | Micro to Mini | 0.05–0.20 lots | Growing precision |
| $10,000–$30,000 | Mini (0.10–0.50) | 0.10–0.60 lots | Full mini range |
| $30,000–$100,000 | Mini to Standard | 0.60–2.00 lots | Transitioning to standard |
| $100,000+ | Standard (1.00+) | 1.00–4.00 lots | Full institutional sizing |
When to upgrade: when the required lot size consistently exceeds 10 micro lots AND your account is above $5,000. Micro lots above 10–15 count become unwieldy and many brokers charge extra spreads.
Micro vs Standard: Summary Comparison
| Factor | Micro (0.01 lots) | Standard (1.00 lots) |
|---|---|---|
| Pip value (EUR/USD) | $0.10 | $10.00 |
| Min viable account | $200 | $20,000 |
| P&L per trade (50-pip win) | $5 | $500 |
| Emotional impact | Low | High |
| Spread cost impact | Same % | Same % |
| Precision | High | Lower (need mix for precision) |
| Best for | Learning, small accounts | Professional, large accounts |
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I trade micro or standard lots as a beginner? Micro lots. At any account below $5,000, standard lots produce excessive risk percentages. Start with micro and progress as your balance grows.
Are micro lots good for funded trader practice? Yes — trading micro lots at 10× reduced dollar amounts lets you practice funded-account-style discipline (0.5% risk rules, daily caps) without the evaluation pressure.
What is the difference between 0.01 and 1.00 lot? 0.01 is a micro lot (1,000 units, $0.10/pip). 1.00 is a standard lot (100,000 units, $10/pip). Standard is 100× larger than micro in every dimension.
When should I move from micro to standard lots? When your account consistently requires 10+ micro lots per trade (meaning the account is large enough for mini or standard lots), and when you’ve demonstrated consistent risk discipline over 3+ months at the smaller size.
How do I get precise lot sizes between increments? Use 0.01 lot increments (most brokers support this). A target of 0.37 lots = 3 mini lots (0.30) + 7 micro lots (0.07). Add them as a single order if your broker supports fractional lot entry.