What the R-Multiple Calculator tells you
The R-Multiple Calculator helps translate a trading assumption into a measurable output. Express a trade result as a multiple of the amount initially risked. Instead of relying on a rough mental estimate, it makes the relationship between each input and the result visible.
The number is most useful when it is calculated before a decision and saved with the reasoning behind it. That creates a clean baseline for reviewing what changed between the plan, execution, and final outcome. It also exposes assumptions that may otherwise remain hidden, such as a fixed return, perfect execution, stable volatility, or an unchanged fee schedule.
This calculator does not forecast a market move or guarantee an execution result. Live liquidity, gaps, slippage, charges, taxes, broker controls, and exchange rules can produce a different outcome.
How to use this calculator
Enter the values using one consistent currency, time interval, and unit convention. Results update automatically. If an input is unknown, obtain it from the current broker contract specification, statement, trading plan, or official schedule instead of substituting a convenient guess.
| Input | What to enter | Default example |
|---|---|---|
| Trade P&L | Net profit or loss for the trade. | 7500 |
| Initial risk | Money risked when the trade was opened. | 5000 |
- 1
Define the decision
Decide exactly what you are testing: a planned order, an existing position, a historical sample, or a hypothetical scenario.
- 2
Enter consistent inputs
Use the same currency and measurement basis throughout. Avoid mixing percentages with decimals or per-contract figures with total-position figures.
- 3
Read the primary and supporting results
The highlighted number answers the main question. Supporting outputs explain the exposure, denominator, or constraint behind it.
- 4
Run a stress scenario
Change one uncertain input in an unfavorable direction and observe how sensitive the result is.
- 5
Validate and record
Confirm live terms with the relevant official source, then record the assumptions with the trade plan or journal entry.
Formula explained
R-Multiple = Trade P&L / Initial RiskThe formula defines a relationship; it does not judge whether the assumptions are sensible. Read every term from left to right, confirm the units, and identify which variable creates the largest change in the output. Absolute-value symbols mean the calculator uses the size of a distance regardless of direction. Percentages are converted to decimals internally before multiplication.
Rounding happens only for display unless the result represents a tradable quantity. Share, contract, or lot quantities should generally be rounded down to the permitted increment so the selected risk limit is not exceeded. Currency results are displayed to two decimal places, but an exchange, broker, or tax calculation may apply its own rounding rules.
Use a sufficiently large and consistently recorded sample.
Separate strategy performance from deposits, withdrawals, and changing position sizes.
Compare like with like: the same return interval, market, and risk definition.
Three ways to test the calculation
Base plan
Start with the default example shown in the calculator. Follow the displayed breakdown line by line and confirm that each value has the expected unit. This creates a reference result before any stress assumptions are introduced.
Conservative case
Reduce the favorable assumption or increase the cost, volatility, stop distance, loss size, or required margin. If a modest change makes the plan unacceptable, the original decision has little margin for error.
Execution reality
Add realistic fees, slippage, rounding, and position limits. Compare this result with the clean theoretical output to see whether market friction changes the decision.
A scenario is not a prediction. Its purpose is to reveal the range of possible outcomes and the assumptions carrying the most weight. Change one input at a time when diagnosing sensitivity; change several together when testing a coherent adverse scenario.
When to use the R-Multiple Calculator
Before the trade
Convert the planned setup into explicit quantities, thresholds, costs, or expected outcomes while there is still time to change it.
When assumptions change
Recalculate after a price, stop, volatility, margin, rate, or fee input changes materially.
During review
Compare the planned calculation with actual execution and identify which assumption caused the difference.
For strategy research
Apply the same definitions across a consistent sample instead of changing the method from trade to trade.
How to interpret the result
Interpret the primary result together with its supporting outputs and the uncertainty of the inputs. A mathematically correct number can still be operationally unsuitable. A position may fit the risk percentage but exceed buying power; a projected return may ignore drawdown; a theoretical option value may not be tradable; and a tax estimate may use the wrong classification.
Document the value, date, source, and reason for any input likely to change. This is especially important for margin, contract multipliers, rates, fees, tax rules, and market-session schedules.
Common calculation mistakes
Mixing units. A percentage entered as 0.01 instead of 1, or a per-share value treated as a total value, can change the output by orders of magnitude.
Using stale live inputs. Margin, fees, tax rules, contract specifications, rates, and session schedules can change.
Ignoring fees and slippage. Gross calculations overstate the result when friction is material relative to the expected edge.
Rounding quantity upward. Increasing a position to the next whole lot can exceed the intended risk limit.
Treating an estimate as a guarantee. Stops can gap, models simplify reality, and historical measurements do not predict future performance.
Optimizing only one metric. A better average price, win rate, target, or leverage figure can conceal higher total exposure or drawdown.
For tax, brokerage, margin, liquidation, contract, and regulatory calculations, verify the current rule with the relevant broker, exchange, regulator, or qualified professional.
Frequently asked questions
What does the R-Multiple Calculator calculate?
Express a trade result as a multiple of the amount initially risked. The calculator applies the displayed formula to the values you enter and updates the result in your browser.
What formula does this calculator use?
R-Multiple = Trade P&L / Initial Risk. Review the formula section and calculation breakdown before using the output in a trading plan.
Does this calculator provide trading or investment advice?
No. It is an educational planning tool. Its output depends on your assumptions and does not predict execution, liquidity, taxes, broker action, or future returns.
Are the results guaranteed to match my broker?
No. Brokers, exchanges, instruments, jurisdictions, rounding methods, margin schedules, and fees may use different rules. Confirm all live values with the relevant official source.