AAPL Pip Value Calculator – Apple Stock CFD
Get Pulsar Terminal for advanced position sizingPip Value — AAPL
| Pip Size | 0.01 |
| Pip Value (1 lot) | $1 |
| Contract Size | 1 |
| Typical Spread | 0.5 pips |
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One pip on AAPL equals exactly $1.00 per contract — clean, simple, and easy to scale. Knowing this number before you enter a trade is what separates disciplined position sizing from guesswork. Here's how to calculate it, apply it, and use it to protect your capital.
Key Takeaways
- The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Contracts. For AAPL, plug in the numbe...
- Apple crossed $220.00 in mid-2024 and became a high-volume CFD instrument on MT5 brokers. Here's a concrete example usin...
- Most traders set a stop-loss first and forget to check what that stop actually costs them in dollars. That's backwards. ...
1How to Calculate Pip Value for AAPL
The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = Pip Size × Contract Size × Number of Contracts.
For AAPL, plug in the numbers: pip size is 0.01, contract size is 1. That gives you 0.01 × 1 = $0.01 per pip, per contract — but since AAPL is quoted in USD and settled in USD, the pip value scales to $1.00 per full pip movement (100 pips = $1.00 price move). One contract, one dollar per pip. No currency conversion needed.
Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator auto-fills AAPL's contract size and pip value, so you never have to punch these numbers in manually before a trade. Scale to 10 contracts and your pip value becomes $10.00. At 50 contracts, $50.00 per pip. Linear scaling makes AAPL one of the cleaner instruments to size positions on.
2AAPL Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Trade
Apple crossed $220.00 in mid-2024 and became a high-volume CFD instrument on MT5 brokers. Here's a concrete example using current instrument specs.
You buy 20 contracts of AAPL at $215.50. Your stop-loss sits at $214.00 — a distance of 150 pips (150 × 0.01 = $1.50 price move). Pip value per contract: $1.00. Total risk calculation: 150 pips × $1.00 × 20 contracts = $3,000 at risk.
The typical spread on AAPL is 0.5 pips, which costs you $0.50 per contract on entry. On 20 contracts, that's $10.00 in spread cost — small relative to a $3,000 risk envelope, but worth factoring into your break-even level. Entry at $215.50 means your real break-even is $215.505 on the buy side.
“Most traders set a stop-loss first and forget to check what that stop actually costs them in dollars.”
3Why Pip Value Determines Your Maximum Position Size
Most traders set a stop-loss first and forget to check what that stop actually costs them in dollars. That's backwards.
Start with your account risk budget. Say you're willing to lose $500 on a single AAPL trade. Your stop is 50 pips from entry. With a $1.00 pip value per contract: $500 ÷ (50 × $1.00) = 10 contracts maximum. Exceed that and you're risking more than your plan allows — regardless of how confident you feel about the setup.
This math also exposes a common mistake: using percentage-based position sizing without verifying the pip value first. A 2% risk rule on a $25,000 account gives you $500 to risk. But if you're trading 25 contracts with a 50-pip stop, you're actually risking $1,250 — 5% of account. The pip value calculation closes that gap. Run it every time, on every trade size adjustment.

Risk Disclaimer
Trading financial instruments carries significant risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Past performance does not guarantee future results. This content is for educational purposes only and should not be considered investment advice. Always conduct your own research before trading.