Pip value, position size, margin, P&L and compounding β priced in INR. No sign-up, no fluff.
Every tool runs in INR and recalculates as you type. Pick one to jump straight to it.
Size each position to a defined % risk and stop-loss in pips.
Open βFind out how much margin a trade requires at 1:50 to 1:500 leverage.
Open βEnter your entry, exit and direction to estimate the INR outcome.
Open βProject how your account grows with a consistent monthly return.
Open βWork out the overnight financing cost for positions held past rollover.
Open βEvery forex position moves in pips, but your profit and loss lands in your account currency. If you trade an INR account, a 40-pip stop on USD/INR is a very different rupee amount than the same stop on USD/JPY β and guessing is how accounts blow up.
Professionals decide how much they're willing to lose first, then work backwards to the lot size. A pip calculator turns "2% of βΉ50,000 over a 40-pip stop" into an exact position size, so a single trade can never cost more than you planned.
Pip value changes with the pair, the lot size and the current exchange rate. Running the numbers lets you compare a setup on EUR/INR against one on USD/JPY using the one figure that matters: rupees at risk per pip.
Leverage decides how much margin a trade locks up; your stop-loss decides how much you actually risk. Keeping the two separate β and checking both before entry β is the habit that keeps a trading account alive.