Grid Trading Strategy
A grid trading strategy that places a lattice of buy and sell orders across a range, profiting from natural price oscillation without predicting direction.
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Grid Trading Strategy
Overview
A grid strategy spreads a series of buy orders below the current price and sell orders above it. As price oscillates inside a range, the grid captures profit on each leg without requiring the trader to predict direction. It works best in ranging, sideways markets and fails hardest in strong trends, where the grid runs out of capital on one side.
Setup
- Instruments: forex majors, crypto pairs with high liquidity and a tendency to range
- Timeframe: 1H, 4H, or daily
- Indicators: ATR(14) to set grid spacing, a defined range (support and resistance)
- Market regime: ranging — never run a grid into a strong trend
Grid spacing should be roughly 0.5 × ATR(14); tighter grids trade more but carry more risk.
Entry rules
- Define the range: identify clear support and resistance with multiple tests
- Set grid spacing (e.g., every 0.5 × ATR)
- Place buy orders at each level below the current price, sell orders at each level above
- Each buy order has a corresponding sell target one grid level higher; each sell order has a buy target one grid level lower
- The grid trades itself as price oscillates — each filled order captures one grid of profit
Stop loss
- Hard stop beyond the range: exit the entire grid if price closes beyond support (long grid) or resistance
- Maximum total grid risk: 3% of account — the grid must not consume the account if it runs
- Close the grid immediately if ATR expands sharply — a regime change is underway
Use the stop loss calculator to size the emergency stop.
Take profit
- Each leg takes profit at the next grid level (one grid of profit per fill)
- The grid is closed entirely when the range breaks or the daily loss limit is hit
- Grids compound slowly; patience is the strategy's engine
Confirm per-leg math with the risk-reward calculator.
Risk management
- Total grid risk capped at 3% of account, spread across all levels
- Position size per leg = (total risk ÷ number of grid levels). Verify with the position size calculator
- Run only one grid per instrument; multiple grids stack correlated risk
- Reduce grid size when a major news release is imminent — breakouts break grids
When it fails
Grids fail in trends, where price runs through every level on one side, leaving the trader with a stack of losing legs. The hard stop beyond the range is the only protection. Never expand a losing grid ("martingale") to recover — that path leads to account ruin. If the range breaks, close and wait for a new range to form.
Strategy is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice.