Understand Risk-Reward β Before You Celebrate Win Rate
A trade with a 70% win rate can drain your account. A trade with a 35% win rate can multiply it. The difference is not luck but risk-reward ratio β planned profit versus maximum loss. The risk-reward calculator on indicator.trading computes your R:R, break-even win rate, expectancy in R-multiples, and profit factor β and in a second step shows whether your real hit rate supports the setup.
Most beginners ask after the trade: βWas I right?β Professionals ask before: βIs the ratio worth it?β This guide explains the math without turning it into a dry formula catalog.
What is risk-reward?
The risk-reward ratio (also R:R or reward-to-risk) compares two distances on the chart:
- Risk: distance from entry to stop-loss
- Reward: distance from entry to take-profit (or target)
R:R = Reward Γ· Risk
A 1:2 ratio means: for every dollar (or pip, or point) you risk, you target two dollars of profit. In pro notation you say β1 to 2β β one unit of risk against two units of reward.
Concrete example
Long trade at $100 stock price:
- Stop-loss: $98 β risk = $2
- Take-profit: $106 β reward = $6
- R:R = 6 Γ· 2 = 1:3
You risk $2 per share and aim for $6. Whether you actually capture $6 is another question β but before entry you must know if the target is realistic and the ratio attractive.
π‘ Nice to Know: R:R describes planning, not outcome. A 1:4 trade that hits the stop was not βbad R:Rβ β it was a loss within a good plan.
Calculating R:R β long, short, and edge cases
Long position
R:R = (Take-profit β Entry) Γ· (Entry β Stop-loss)
EUR/USD long example:
- Entry: 1.1000
- Stop: 1.0970 (30 pips risk)
- Target: 1.1060 (60 pips reward)
- R:R = 60 Γ· 30 = 1:2
Short position
R:R = (Entry β Take-profit) Γ· (Stop-loss β Entry)
DAX short example:
- Entry: 18,400
- Stop: 18,450 (50 points risk)
- Target: 18,250 (150 points reward)
- R:R = 150 Γ· 50 = 1:3
When there is no fixed target
Some swing traders use trailing stops instead of a fixed take-profit. You can still check minimum R:R at entry (βI only enter if the next target is at least 1:2β) and let the rest run. The calculator is useful as a filter, not a guarantee.
π― Pro Tip: Measure risk and reward in the same unit β pips, points, or dollars per share. Do not mix currencies in your head.
Break-even win rate β when do you make money?
Break-even win rate is the minimum hit rate at which you neither win nor lose over many trades β for a given R:R.
Break-even win rate = 1 Γ· (1 + R:R) Γ 100%
| R:R | Break-even win rate | |-----|---------------------| | 1:1 | 50.0% | | 1:1.5 | 40.0% | | 1:2 | 33.3% | | 1:3 | 25.0% | | 1:4 | 20.0% | | 1:5 | 16.7% |
At 1:2 R:R you only need to win one third of trades to break even. Everything above is profit β before costs. That is why pros prefer 1:2 at 40% win rate over 1:0.5 at 80% win rate.
Why 80% win rate can still lose
Imagine you win eight of ten trades at +$50 each but lose twice at β$200:
- Wins: 8 Γ $50 = $400
- Losses: 2 Γ $200 = $400
- Net: $0
High win rate with poor R:R feels good β until a few losses erase everything. Scalpers and mean-reversion strategies need tight stops and disciplined exits.
β οΈ Warning: Break-even ignores spread, commission, and slippage. Realistic backtest R:R should be reduced by 0.1β0.2 R.
Expectancy β the key metric of your system
Expectancy tells you how much you average per trade β in R-multiples (multiples of your risk).
Expectancy (in R) = (Win rate Γ R:R) β ((1 β Win rate) Γ 1)
Example: 45% win rate at 1:2 R:R:
- Expectancy = (0.45 Γ 2) β (0.55 Γ 1) = 0.90 β 0.55 = +0.35 R
Per trade you expect 0.35 times your risk as profit on average. If you risk $100 per trade, expectancy is +$35 over many trades.
Positive vs. negative systems
- Expectancy > 0: Statistically profitable system
- Expectancy = 0: Break-even β costs eat you alive
- Expectancy < 0: Long-term loss no matter how good some weeks feel
A system at +0.2 R sounds small β over 200 trades per year and 1% risk per trade it adds up. The calculator shows expectancy and whether your setup is βpositiveβ or βnegative.β
Profit factor β wins vs. losses
Profit factor compares total wins to total losses:
Profit factor = (Number of wins Γ average win in R) Γ· (Number of losses Γ 1 R)
Simplified from win rate and R:R at fixed R:R:
At 45% win rate and 1:2 over 100 trades:
- 45 wins Γ 2 R = 90 R
- 55 losses Γ 1 R = 55 R
- Profit factor = 90 Γ· 55 β 1.64
Rule of thumb:
- Below 1.0: Losing system
- 1.0β1.5: Borderline β costs critical
- 1.5β2.0: Solid retail performance
- Above 2.0: Very good β check if backtest is realistic
Profit factor complements expectancy: two systems can share expectancy but differ in equity curve volatility.
Win-rate analysis β as on professional platforms
Tools like TrendSpider, Tradervue, or a solid trading journal separate two layers:
- Setup quality: Does R:R fit the chart? Is break-even achievable?
- Execution quality: Do you hit backtest win rate live?
The second panel on indicator.trading simulates this: you enter historical or estimated win rate and number of trades β the calculator shows:
- Expectancy per trade in R
- Total result after N trades in R
- Profit factor
- Win vs. loss breakdown
Practice: journal vs. wishful thinking
Many traders overestimate win rate by 10β15 percentage points. Therefore:
- Use win rate from at least 50β100 documented trades
- Count only trades matching the same setup
- Track rule-break losses separately
If backtest shows 52% win rate at 1:1.5 R:R and the calculator gives +0.28 R expectancy but you only achieve 38% live, the problem is not R:R β it is execution, slippage, or market regime.
Example simulation
Entry 100, stop 98, target 106 β R:R = 1:3, break-even = 25%
You enter: win rate 40%, 100 trades
- Expectancy: (0.40 Γ 3) β 0.60 = +0.60 R per trade
- After 100 trades: +60 R theoretically
- Profit factor: (40 Γ 3) Γ· 60 = 2.0
At 1% risk per trade, +60 R is roughly +60% account growth β without compounding or losing streaks. Monte Carlo would be more realistic; this is a first plausibility check.
R:R and position size together
Risk-reward and the position size calculator are partners:
- Position size defines how much 1 R is in dollars
- R:R defines how much you take home in R on a win
A 1:3 trade at 1% risk can add +3% to the account β if you hit take-profit. A 1:1 trade needs double the win rate for the same effect.
More background in risk-reward ratio.
R:R across strategy types
Trend following
Often lower win rate (30β45%), higher R:R (1:2 to 1:5). Many small losses, few large wins. Break-even quote is low β but psychologically hard because losing streaks are long.
Mean reversion
Often higher win rate (55β70%), lower R:R (1:0.8 to 1:1.5). Many small wins, rare large losses. Break-even is high β one outlier can wipe out weeks.
Scalping
Very high win rate needed at 1:0.5 to 1:1. Spread and commission eat R:R β subtract at least 0.1β0.2 R from reward in the calculator.
No style is βbetterβ β each has a minimum combination of win rate and R:R that expectancy makes visible.
Common risk-reward mistakes
Targets in the sky
1:10 R:R looks brilliant on paper. If you hit it in 2% of trades and otherwise stop out, expectancy is negative. Targets must be chart-based β next zone, not wish price.
Stop too tight
A tight stop improves R:R on paper but hurts real win rate. Break-even drops β but if your actual win rate drops faster, you lose twice.
Closing winners early
You plan 1:3 but exit at 1:0.8 from fear. Realized R:R diverges from planned. The journal should track realized R:R.
R:R without statistics
One trade can be anything. Only over 30β50 trades do you see if your win rate and R:R combination holds. The calculator is the start β the journal supplies real numbers.
How to use the risk-reward calculator
Panel 1 β Risk and reward:
- Enter entry, stop-loss, and take-profit
- Read R:R and break-even win rate
- Check: Is the target chart-logical? Is break-even below your expected win rate?
Panel 2 β Win rate and expectancy:
- Enter win rate from journal or backtest
- Choose number of trades for simulation
- Interpret expectancy, total R, and profit factor
If expectancy is negative, mindset will not help β you need better setups, filters, or honest win-rate assumptions.
Conclusion: R:R is the language of edge
Win rate is emotional. Risk-reward is mathematical. Together they form expectancy β and that decides whether you stay in the market long term.
Use the calculator before every setup as a filter: Does this trade make statistical sense if I am honest? If yes, use the position size calculator for the dollar side. If no, not trading is the most profitable decision of the day.
