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Trading Strategies & Order Types
2 min readUpdated May 16, 2026

Risk-Reward Ratio

ByConvex Research Desk·Edited byBen Bleier·
risk/reward ratioR:Rrisk to rewardreward-to-risk

The risk-reward ratio compares the potential loss of a trade to its potential profit, helping traders evaluate whether a trade setup offers a favorable payoff relative to the risk taken.

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What Is Risk-Reward Ratio?

The risk-reward ratio (R:R) compares the potential downside of a trade to its potential upside. It is calculated by dividing the risk (entry price minus stop-loss price) by the reward (target price minus entry price). A ratio of 1:2 means the potential profit is twice the potential loss. This metric is fundamental to trade evaluation and is used by virtually every disciplined trader.

The ratio forces a critical question before every trade: "Is the potential profit worth the risk I am taking?" By establishing this framework, traders systematically avoid trades where the potential reward does not justify the risk.

How Risk-Reward Drives Profitability

A strategy's profitability depends on the combination of win rate and risk-reward ratio, known as expectancy. The formula is: Expectancy = (Win Rate × Average Win) - (Loss Rate × Average Loss). A positive expectancy means the strategy is profitable over many trades.

With a 1:2 risk-reward ratio, a trader needs to win just 34% of trades to break even (before costs). With a 1:3 ratio, only 25% wins are needed. This math explains why trend followers can be profitable despite winning less than half their trades: their winners are significantly larger than their losers.

R-multiples express trade outcomes as multiples of risk. A 2R winner is a trade that made twice the initial risk. A 0.5R winner is one that was closed early, capturing half the planned profit. Tracking R-multiples across all trades provides a clear picture of the strategy's expectancy and consistency.

Applying Risk-Reward in Practice

Before entering any trade, define three prices: entry, stop loss, and profit target. Calculate the ratio. If it is below your minimum threshold (commonly 1:2), skip the trade regardless of how good the setup looks.

Position sizing is integrated with risk-reward by fixing the dollar risk per trade. If you risk $100 per trade (1% of a $10,000 account), a 1:3 R:R trade risks $100 to potentially gain $300. This consistent framework applies across all trades and ensures each trade contributes proportionally to the overall portfolio performance.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good risk-reward ratio?
Most experienced traders seek a minimum risk-reward ratio of 1:2, meaning the potential profit is at least twice the potential loss. A 1:3 ratio is considered excellent. The required ratio depends on your win rate: a 1:1 ratio requires a win rate above 50% to be profitable, while a 1:3 ratio only requires a 25% win rate (plus enough to cover commissions). Some trend-following strategies accept ratios of 1:5 or higher but with win rates of only 30-40%. The optimal ratio balances realistic profit targets with the statistical requirements of your strategy's win rate.
How do you calculate risk-reward ratio?
The risk-reward ratio is calculated by dividing the distance from the entry to the stop loss (risk) by the distance from the entry to the profit target (reward). If you buy a stock at $50, set a stop at $48 (risk = $2), and target $56 (reward = $6), the risk-reward ratio is 1:3 (or $2:$6). Always define both the stop loss and target before entering a trade. Some traders express this as "R-multiple," where 1R is the amount risked. A 3R trade means the profit potential is three times the amount risked.
Why is risk-reward ratio important?
Risk-reward ratio is important because it determines whether a strategy can be profitable over many trades. Even with a mediocre win rate, a favorable risk-reward ratio produces profits. A trader who wins only 40% of the time but averages 3R on wins and 1R on losses has a positive expectancy: (0.40 x 3) - (0.60 x 1) = 0.60R average profit per trade. Without evaluating risk-reward before entering, traders often take trades with poor odds that erode their capital over time. The ratio forces discipline by requiring that every trade has a clear risk and a proportionally attractive reward before entry.

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