
/pɪp/since Late 1990s (standardized with electronic forex platforms)Pip — pip is the smallest standard price move in a currency pair — basically the tiniest wiggle the market can make, and the unit every forex trader lives and dies by.
Think of the forex market as an ocean. Waves crash, tides shift, storms rage — but a pip? A pip is a single raindrop. It's the smallest standardized unit of price movement in the foreign exchange market, and it's the currency (pun intended) traders use to talk about gains, losses, spreads, and risk. Everything in forex is measured in pips.
For the vast majority of currency pairs — think EUR/USD, GBP/USD, AUD/USD — a pip is the fourth decimal place, or 0.0001. So if EUR/USD moves from 1.0850 to 1.0851, that's one pip. One tiny, precious, sometimes heartbreaking pip. If you've ever stared at a chart muttering 'come on, just 5 more pips,' you already understand the concept intuitively.
Why does this matter? Because pips give traders a universal language. Instead of saying 'the price moved by 0.00430 dollars,' you say 'it moved 43 pips.' Clean, simple, comparable across any pair. It's the lingua franca of the trading floor — and once it clicks, you'll wonder how you ever talked about prices any other way.

Here's the formula you'll see everywhere:
Pip Value = (Pip Size / Current Exchange Rate) × Lot Size
It sounds more intimidating than it is. Let's break it down nice and slow. For a standard lot (100,000 units) of EUR/USD trading at 1.0850:
Pip Value = (0.0001 / 1.0850) × 100,000 = roughly $9.22 per pip
For USD-quoted pairs (where USD is the quote currency), the math is even simpler — your pip value is almost always a clean $10 per pip on a standard lot, $1 on a mini lot, and $0.10 on a micro lot. That's the rule of thumb traders tattoo on their brains early on. When the USD is the base currency instead, you'll need to divide by the current exchange rate — which is where that formula earns its keep. It's simpler than it looks once you've run it a handful of times, promise.
Alright, let's say you buy 1 standard lot of EUR/USD at 1.0800. Your broker fills the order, the trade is open, and you're watching the chart like a hawk. The price ticks up to 1.0850. That's a 50-pip move in your favor.
Using our formula: Pip Value = (0.0001 / 1.0850) × 100,000 ≈ $9.22. Multiply by 50 pips: you're up roughly $461. Not bad for a morning's work.
Now let's try GBP/JPY, because cross pairs with JPY love to keep you on your toes. GBP/JPY is quoted to 2 decimal places (e.g., 191.50), so here a pip = 0.01. If GBP/JPY moves from 191.50 to 191.80, that's 30 pips. The pip value calculation for JPY pairs in USD terms requires converting through the USD/JPY rate, but most modern trading platforms handle this automatically — your P&L updates in real time so you're never doing this by hand mid-trade.
Bottom line: your broker's platform calculates pip values for you. But understanding the logic means you'll never be blindsided by why a 50-pip win on one pair feels different from a 50-pip win on another.
Just when you thought you had it all figured out, here come the exceptions. Welcome to forex.
The big one: Japanese Yen pairs. Because the yen is a lower-valued currency relative to the dollar, JPY pairs are only quoted to 2 decimal places instead of 4. So for USD/JPY, EUR/JPY, GBP/JPY and friends, one pip = 0.01, not 0.0001. Miss this detail and your position sizing is immediately off. Yeah, it's annoying the first time you realize it. Every trader has been there.
Then there are exotic pairs and some CFDs on currencies that quote to 3 decimal places — and gold (XAU/USD) is often quoted to 2 decimal places, where the pip equivalent is typically $0.01 per troy ounce. Crypto pairs on forex platforms can behave differently still, sometimes with pip definitions varying by broker convention.
And finally: pipettes. Some brokers quote to 5 decimal places (or 3 for JPY pairs), which means that fifth decimal is a fractional pip — called a pipette or point. It's 1/10th of a pip. Tighter spreads look more impressive in pipettes, so keep your eyes open when comparing broker quotes.

Let's lock this in with three real-world scenarios.
Example 1 — EUR/USD (classic) You buy EUR/USD at 1.0801 and close at 1.0851. Move: 50 pips. On a mini lot (10,000 units), pip value ≈ $1. Profit: ~$50. Simple.
Example 2 — USD/JPY (the JPY curveball) You short USD/JPY at 149.80, it drops to 149.30. Move: 50 pips (remember: 0.01 per pip here). On a standard lot, pip value ≈ $6.70 (varies with rate). Profit: ~$335.
Example 3 — GBP/USD (feeling the pip value difference) You go long GBP/USD at 1.2650, it climbs to 1.2700. Move: 50 pips. Standard lot pip value ≈ $10. Profit: ~$500.
| Pair | Entry | Exit | Pips | Lot | Approx. Profit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EUR/USD | 1.0801 | 1.0851 | 50 | Mini | ~$50 |
| USD/JPY | 149.80 | 149.30 | 50 | Standard | ~$335 |
| GBP/USD | 1.2650 | 1.2700 | 50 | Standard | ~$500 |
Same 50-pip move, wildly different dollar outcomes. This is why knowing your pip value before entering a trade isn't optional — it's survival.
The pip didn't always exist as a formal concept — it emerged as a practical necessity when the forex market became accessible to retail traders in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Before electronic platforms democratized currency trading, forex was a professional interbank game played over the phone in enormous notional sizes. Dealers spoke in 'points' and 'ticks,' and the terminology was loose.
As retail platforms standardized quoting conventions to 4 decimal places (a legacy of how interbank dealers had always quoted prices), 'pip' — short for 'percentage in point' or sometimes 'price interest point,' and yes, traders still argue about which it stands for — became the universal retail standard. The term stuck because it's precise, portable, and pair-agnostic.
Historical volatility events gave pips their drama. On January 15, 2015, the Swiss National Bank unpegged the franc from the euro — USD/CHF moved roughly 2,500 pips in minutes. Some broker accounts were wiped out before a single stop-loss could be processed. That event, known as the 'Francogeddon,' is a reminder that pips are tiny units, but enough of them moving fast enough can change everything.