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EURCZK Pip Value Calculator – 0.43 per Pip

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EURCZK

0.0001
Pip Value (1 lot)$0.43
100,000
15 pips

$1.50
$4.50
$99.00
$1188.00

Risk LevelMedium Risk
0.40
$200.00
$4.00
: $200184£158

You've sized your EURCZK position and set a 50-pip stop-loss — but do you know the exact dollar amount at risk? On this pair, each pip is worth $0.43 on a standard lot, which means that 50-pip stop costs you $21.50 per lot. Small numbers, but they compound fast when you're running multiple positions.

  • The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Current Exchange Rate. For EURCZK, the pip size...
  • Counterintuitive fact: the typical EURCZK spread of 15 pips costs you $6.45 per standard lot just to enter a trade — bef...
  • Most traders set risk as a percentage of account equity — say, 1% of a $5,000 account equals $50 maximum risk. Without k...
1

How to Calculate EURCZK Pip Value

The formula is straightforward: Pip Value = (Pip Size × Contract Size) / Current Exchange Rate. For EURCZK, the pip size is 0.0001 and the contract size is 100,000 units. At an exchange rate of roughly 25.30, that gives you (0.0001 × 100,000) / 25.30 = $0.395 — which rounds to the published standard of $0.43 depending on the live rate. The pip value floats. As the EURCZK rate moves, so does the dollar cost of each pip. A stronger Czech Koruna (lower exchange rate) increases pip value in USD terms; a weaker Koruna does the opposite. This is why recalculating before each trade matters more than memorizing a fixed number. Pulsar Terminal's built-in pip value calculator handles this automatically, pulling live contract size and pip value data so you never work from stale figures.

2

EURCZK Pip Value Example: Real Numbers, Real Risk

Counterintuitive fact: the typical EURCZK spread of 15 pips costs you $6.45 per standard lot just to enter a trade — before price moves a single pip in your favor. Here's the full example. You open 2 standard lots on EURCZK. Your stop-loss is 40 pips below entry. Risk per pip = $0.43 × 2 lots = $0.86. Total risk = $0.86 × 40 pips = $34.40. Now add the spread cost: 15 pips × $0.43 × 2 lots = $12.90. Your real break-even point is already 15 pips away from entry. That $34.40 stop is effectively a $47.30 risk from the moment the order fills. Running this calculation before entry — not after — is what separates disciplined position sizing from guesswork.

Most traders set risk as a percentage of account equity — say, 1% of a $5,000 account equals $50 maximum risk.

3

Why Pip Value Determines Your Risk-Per-Trade Accuracy

Most traders set risk as a percentage of account equity — say, 1% of a $5,000 account equals $50 maximum risk. Without knowing pip value, converting that $50 into a stop-loss distance is impossible. On EURCZK with a $0.43 pip value per lot, a $50 risk budget allows roughly 116 pips of stop distance on one lot, or 58 pips on two lots. Miss this calculation and you either over-risk (blowing past your 1% rule) or under-risk (leaving valid trade setups with stops too tight to survive normal volatility). EURCZK is a moderately volatile cross that saw daily ranges exceeding 80 pips regularly through 2023, so tight stops get clipped often. Accurate pip value math lets you place stops at technically valid levels while keeping dollar risk exactly where your plan requires it.

Q1What is the pip value for EURCZK on a mini lot (10,000 units)?

On a mini lot, the pip value is approximately $0.043 — one-tenth of the standard lot value. Use the same formula: (0.0001 × 10,000) / current EURCZK rate. At a rate of 25.30, that equals roughly $0.04 per pip.