Calculator GuidesTrading — Buy
How to Use the Scale In Calculator
← Back to the Scale In Calculator
What this calculator actually helps you understand
The Scale In calculator exists for investors who want to build positions gradually without exceeding risk. It turns that decision into a repeatable checklist instead of a guess. It works best when additional entries remain correlated to base trade. Rather than promising outperformance, it helps you surface the trade-offs described as “Show pyramiding vs averaging down scenarios.”
Inputs explained (with realistic examples)
- Account size or risk capital: How much capital you are willing to size from. Use current equity, not a rounded number from memory.
- Risk per trade: Either a fixed cash amount or a percentage of equity that you can afford to lose if the stop is hit.
- Entry and stop levels: Your planned fill price and the level where you will exit if wrong. Both should factor in slippage and volatility.
Outputs: how to read the results
- Recommended position size: How many units you can hold while respecting the risk cap.
- Cash at risk: The loss you accept if the stop executes as planned.
- What it does not do: Guarantee returns or outcomes. It simply applies the assumption "Additional entries remain correlated to base trade" to your inputs.
Common mistakes people make
- Treating each tranche as independent risk.
- Treating the output as a forecast instead of a scenario.
- Ignoring fees, taxes, or behavior changes that sit outside the model.
When this calculator is genuinely useful
- When you need a calm way to build positions gradually without exceeding risk without hand-waving.
- When you want to communicate the rationale behind scale in decisions to a partner, advisor, or investment committee.
- When you need to compare multiple scenarios quickly (best/middle/worst).
When this calculator can mislead you
- When the core assumption (“Additional entries remain correlated to base trade”) clearly does not hold in your situation.
- When inputs are based on optimistic guesses rather than verifiable numbers.
- When behavioral factors (sticking with contributions, honoring stops, etc.) matter more than the math.
How this fits into a broader financial decision
Scale In is one slice of the decision. Pair it with qualitative checks: liquidity needs, tax context, counterparties, and diversification. Link it with companion calculators (for example: Show pyramiding vs averaging down scenarios) so readers see how today’s choice affects the rest of the plan.
Use the calculator
Rules
- Do not treat any scenario as personalized advice.
- Stay conservative with inputs and double-check assumptions before acting.
- Avoid country-specific tax or regulatory claims unless you verify them yourself.