Here's something that catches nearly every new forex trader off guard: you place your first trade, and immediately you're down money. Before the market even moves, you're in the hole.
Bad luck? Wrong. That's the spread doing exactly what it's designed to do.
The spread—this gap between buying and selling prices—is how most brokers make their money. Instead of charging you an upfront commission like stock brokers do, they build their fee right into the price you see on your screen. When you look at EUR/USD showing 1.0850 on one side and 1.0852 on the other, that 2-pip difference? Gone the second you click "buy."
Your trade has to move in your favor just to get back to zero. That's the hurdle every winning trade must clear before you see a penny of profit.
Let's put real numbers on this. Say you're actively trading, putting on 20 positions each week. If you're paying 2-pip spreads instead of 0.5-pip spreads, you're bleeding money month after month. Over a year of consistent trading, that difference could mean thousands of dollars that disappeared before your strategy even had a chance to work.
Understanding spreads isn't optional knowledge—it's the difference between knowing your actual costs and flying blind.
Every currency pair shows you two prices simultaneously. On one side sits the bid (what buyers will pay you), on the other sits the ask or offer (what you'll pay sellers). That difference between them? That's your broker pocketing their cut.
When you buy, y...