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⚠️ Crypto Leverage Liquidation Calculator

Enter entry price, leverage, position, and maintenance margin rate to calculate the liquidation price and profit/loss under price-move scenarios.

🚨 Leveraged trading carries a very high risk of total loss and liquidation. This is a simplified reference simulation β€” actual exchange fees, funding rates, and partial-liquidation logic will change the real result. Trade cautiously and only with what you can afford to lose.

β€» Simplified calculation β€” fees and funding rate are not included. Exchange-specific liquidation logic (partial liquidation, auto-deleverage) may differ.
Estimated Liquidation Price
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Distance to Liquidation β€”

P&L by Price-Move Scenario

Price ChangeNew PriceP&L % (leveraged)Status
GUIDE

Learn more

01

How liquidation price is calculated

Liquidation price is the price at which margin falls below the maintenance level and the position is force-closed. Under a simplified isolated-margin model: long liquidation β‰ˆ entry Γ— (1 βˆ’ 1/leverage + MMR), short β‰ˆ entry Γ— (1 + 1/leverage βˆ’ MMR). E.g. a 50,000 long at 10x leverage with 0.5% MMR liquidates around 45,250 β€” roughly a 9.5% drop.
02

Leverage and P&L amplification

In leveraged trading, price moves are amplified by the leverage multiple. At 10x, a 5% price move produces a Β±50% P&L swing. That also means a 5% adverse move can wipe out half your margin β€” the higher the leverage, the narrower the cushion before liquidation.
03

Notes on high-risk products

Leveraged/margin trading can result in losses exceeding your principal. Real exchanges apply fees, funding rates (for perpetuals), and partial-liquidation mechanics not modeled here, so actual liquidation prices will differ. Only trade small amounts you can afford to lose, and set a stop-loss line in advance.

Frequently asked questions

Does this include fees or funding rate?
No. This uses a simplified isolated-margin formula only, without fees, funding rate, or exchange-specific partial-liquidation logic. Treat the result as a reference, not an exact figure.
What is the maintenance margin rate (MMR)?
MMR is the minimum margin ratio required to keep a position open. It varies by leverage, exchange, and asset, typically around 0.4-1%.
Is higher leverage always riskier?
Yes. Higher leverage narrows the price move needed to reach liquidation, so smaller adverse moves can wipe you out. Higher leverage amplifies both potential gains and potential losses.
Should I make real trading decisions based on this?
This is a simplified simulation for reference only. Leveraged/margin trading carries a very high risk of total loss β€” make real trading decisions carefully at your own discretion and risk.