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Stop limit

Order that gets filled automatically at the pre-defined (or better) price, when the target price level is triggered.

Order will be executed at a specified (or better) price, after a given stop price has been reached.

Once the stop price is reached, this stop-limit order becomes a limit order to buy or sell at the limit price or better.

Smart algorithmic orders, available on all exchanges in one interface

Stop limit

Order that gets filled automatically at the pre-defined (or better) price, when the target price level is triggered.

Order will be executed at a specified (or better) price, after a given stop price has been reached.

Once the stop price is reached, this stop-limit order becomes a limit order to buy or sell at the limit price or better.

Advanced trading terminal

Take Profit
Take Profit

Ensures you do not miss a profit at times when you can’t closely watch your trades

Stop Loss
Stop Loss

When the price falls, the system closes the transaction automatically

Trailing
Trailing

The feature that will follow the price and move your open order accordingly

OCO
OCO

Pair of trading orders, connected with a conditional link

Trading View
Trading View

Over 100 indicators and 50 smart drawing tools

100
mln orders
100mln orders
executed
since2017
2017
on 15+crypto exchanges

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FAQ

What is a stop limit trade order?

A stop limit order combines traditional stop orders and limit orders to control entries and exits.

First, you set a stop price to trigger the limit order. If buying, the stop is above the current price. If selling, the stop is below.

Once the market price reaches the stop, a limit order is placed instead of a market order. The limit order can only execute at or better than your specified limit price.

On a buy stop limit, the stop price triggers the entry, while the limit price controls the maximum you’ll pay. For a sell stop limit, the stop activates the exit, and the limit defines the minimum acceptable sell price.

In volatile markets, stop limits attempt to protect against slippage compared to regular stop orders. But they also carry risks of non-execution if prices pass the limit too quickly during rapid moves.

Overall, stop limit orders allow traders to define both activation points and price restrictions for entries and exits. The dual controls aim to navigate volatile conditions.

What is stop-loss limit order example?

Imagine you bought 1 bitcoin (BTC) at $40,000 and set a stop-loss limit order with a Stop Price at $35,000 and Limit Price at $34,500 to protect against losses.

If bitcoin’s price drops to $35,000, your stop loss triggers a limit order to sell at $34,500 or higher. If the market stays between $35,000 and $34,500, your bitcoin could sell in that range.

However, if bitcoin rapidly falls to $34,000, skipping your $34,500 limit, the limit order won’t execute. Your 1 bitcoin would remain held, facing increasing unrealized losses as prices keep falling.

In crypto trading, a stop-loss limit aims to manage risk by defining an acceptable exit price, but does not guarantee execution if the market gaps below your limit.

Can I have a stop limit and sell order at the same time?

You cannot have both a stop limit sell order and a regular sell limit order active simultaneously for the same crypto position on one exchange. The principles are similar to stock trading.

However, some crypto exchanges offer advanced “one cancels the other” (OCO) conditional orders. These allow linking a stop limit and limit order.

With an OCO, if either the stop limit or limit order executes, the other is automatically canceled. This effectively creates a two-stage order where the limit acts as a backup if the stop limit doesn’t trigger.

The OCO structure enables setting both a stop loss price and minimum sell price on one position. If structured properly, it can help manage risks in volatile crypto markets where price gaps are common.

While regular stop limits and limits cannot coexist, crypto traders can achieve similar outcomes using OCO order types on some exchanges. This provides flexible position management tools tailored to crypto’s high volatility.

Why would you use a stop limit order?

A stop limit order combines features of stop orders and limit orders to manage risk and execution price. It gives traders more control than using either order type alone.

The primary application is limiting potential losses on long or short positions. If the price moves against your trade, the stop limit order can exit your position within a predefined price range, capping losses before they widen further.

Stop limits are also useful for protecting gains as an asset’s price rises. Traders can set the stop below the current price but above their entry price to lock in profits while retaining some upside exposure.

Finally, stop limits allow establishing a trade plan without needing to constantly monitor the markets. Once configured, the orders will execute automatically when the price reaches the specified levels.

In summary, stop limit orders are a versatile tool to limit downside risk, protect upside profits, and reduce the need for active management of open positions. They provide bounded execution prices for both stop losses and take profits.