Calculator
Average Win Average Loss Calculator
Calculate average winner and average loser from your trading results so you can use them in expectancy and break-even calculations.
Average trade sizes:
How the calculator works
Average winner is total profit from winning trades divided by the number of winning trades. Average loser is total loss from losing trades divided by the number of losing trades.
For example, $4,200 of profit across 28 winners gives a $150 average winning trade. $2,200 of losses across 22 losing trades gives a $100 average losing trade.
Why average win and average loss matter
Win rate alone does not show whether a system has an edge. You also need to know how large winners are compared with losers.
After calculating average win and average loss, use the expectancy calculator to combine them with win rate.
Average win/loss and payoff ratio
The relationship between average win and average loss is often called payoff ratio. If the average winner is $150 and the average loser is $100, the realized payoff ratio is 1.5. That means the average win is one and a half times the size of the average loss.
This is different from the planned reward/risk before entry. A strategy may aim for 2R targets but close trades early, take partial exits or suffer slippage. The average win and average loss show what actually happened after execution.
After using this calculator, compare the result with payoff ratio in trading and win rate vs risk reward to see whether the trade profile is strong enough.
Example inputs and outputs
These examples use dollar values, but the same idea works in R if your total profit and loss are measured in R.
| Winning trades | Total profit | Losing trades | Total loss | Average win/loss |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | $3,000 | 15 | $1,500 | $150 / $100 |
| 45 | $5,400 | 55 | $4,400 | $120 / $80 |
| 70 | $3,500 | 30 | $4,500 | $50 / $150 |
Use clean data
Make sure winning trades and losing trades are counted consistently. If commissions, slippage or partial exits matter, include them in the total profit and total loss values.
Cleaner inputs make the expectancy result more useful. Bad inputs can make a weak system look better than it is.
Common data mistakes
- Ignoring commissions and fees, which usually makes average losses too small and average wins too large.
- Mixing different strategies in one sample, which can hide the real profile of each setup.
- Counting partial exits inconsistently, especially when one idea is split into several fills.
- Using too few trades, which can make one large winner or loser dominate the averages.
If the sample is small, treat the result as a starting estimate. Then use the sample size in trading guide to decide how much confidence the average values deserve.
Frequently asked questions
Should average loss be entered as a positive number?
Yes. Enter total loss as a positive amount. The calculator treats it as the size of losing trades.
Can I use R instead of dollars?
Yes. If the totals are measured in R, the averages will also be in R.
Why does average loss matter so much?
A high win rate can still lose money if average losses are much larger than average wins.
Is average win/loss the same as planned reward/risk?
No. Planned reward/risk is the setup before the trade. Average win/loss is the realized result after entries, exits, slippage, fees and trade management.
What should I do after calculating the averages?
Use the averages with win rate in the expectancy calculator, then test the path in the trading probability simulator.