Let’s Get to the Fun Part: Scaling In to Winning Trades
Catching a strong trend? Nice! Scaling into a winning trade can be a great way to boost your overall profit—if you do it right.
But unless you’re DJ Khaled and “All you do is win,” there are a few important rules to follow when adding to a profitable position.
🎯 Rules for Safely Adding to Winning Trades:
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Plan ahead. Set the price levels where you’ll add more units before the trade starts moving.
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Know your risk. Recalculate your total risk each time you add to the position.
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Trail your stop. As you add to the trade, adjust your stop loss to keep risk under control.
📈 Example Time: Tom the Trend Trader
Tom’s watching EUR/USD. After a period of consolidation, he believes the pair is about to break higher. He decides to buy euros at 1.2700.
Here’s his game plan:
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Stop loss: 1.2600 (just below the 1.2650 support zone)
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Target: 1.3000 (a strong psychological resistance level)
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Risk-to-reward ratio: 1:3 — not bad at all!
Tom usually risks 2% per trade, but this time he’s confident. Because of the favorable risk-to-reward setup, he decides to start with 1% risk and add more units only if the market moves in his favor.
His account size is $10,000, so:
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Initial risk: $100
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Stop loss: 100 pips
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Position size: 10,000 units
Tom plans to:
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Add 10,000 units every 100 pips
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Move his stop loss 100 pips higher with each addition
🪜 Step-by-Step Scaling:
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Entry #1: Buys 10K units at 1.2700, stop at 1.2600
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Entry #2: Buys 10K more at 1.2800, stop moved to 1.2700
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Entry #3: Buys another 10K at 1.2900, stop moved to 1.2800
Each step reduces his risk while increasing his potential profit—smart scaling in action.
⚠️ But Wait—A Word of Caution:
Before you go scaling into every winning trade, remember this strategy isn’t for every situation.
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Best used in: Strong trends or fast intraday moves
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Why it works: You’re increasing your size as the market proves you right, and your average entry moves in the direction of the trend
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The risk: If the market pulls back after you’ve scaled in, it won’t take much to drag your whole position into negative territory
Also keep in mind:
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In range-bound markets, you’re more likely to get stopped out.
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During low liquidity periods, price swings can be unpredictable.
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Using more margin means you’ll have less free margin available for other trades.
So use this strategy wisely—and always keep your risk in check.
