What is a take profit order in forex trading?
How this answer was verified
- Cross-checked against broker-published fact sheets, regulator licensing databases, and ESMA product intervention notices.
- Reviewed by our editorial team (Marcus Weber CFA, Sofia Lindgren FRM, Daniel Ferretti LLM).
- Refreshed quarterly. The most recent verification date is shown above. Read our methodology.
Related questions
What is a stop loss in forex trading?
A stop loss is a pre-set order that automatically closes a losing position once price reaches a defined level. It limits your maximum loss on any single trade. Most professional traders risk 0.5-2% of their account per trade — the stop loss enforces that limit. ESMA-regulated brokers also provide negative balance protection as a hard floor.
What is a margin call in forex and how do I avoid one?
A margin call is a warning from your broker that your account equity has fallen below the required maintenance margin. If you do not add funds or close losing positions, the broker will begin closing positions automatically (stop out). To avoid margin calls, risk only 1-2% per trade and use a stop loss on every position.
How do I choose a forex broker as a beginner?
Pick a broker with (1) tier-1 regulation (FCA, BaFin, ASIC, CySEC), (2) negative balance protection, (3) low minimum deposit if starting small, (4) MT4/MT5 or a beginner-friendly proprietary platform, and (5) demo account access. Avoid brokers offering 1:500 leverage to retail clients — that is an offshore-only practice and usually a red flag.