If you want to know how to calculate gold pips in XAU/USD, start with one practical rule: many brokers treat a $0.10 move in gold as 1 pip. Once you know the pip size and your lot size, estimating profit or loss becomes much easier.
That matters because gold does not behave like EUR/USD or USD/JPY on the quote screen. The price format, pip size, and dollar impact per move are different, so beginners who use the wrong pip logic often oversize positions.
This guide explains how gold pips are usually counted, how to turn a price move into pips, how pip value changes by lot size, and how to avoid the most common XAU/USD math mistakes.
If you need the contract-size foundation first, read the guide to XAUUSD lot size before using the pip formulas below.
- Typical retail convention: 0.10 in gold price = 1 pip
- If you trade 1 standard lot = 100 ounces, then 1 pip is usually worth $10
- A $1.50 move in gold is usually 15 pips
- Always verify symbol specs because some platforms display points more precisely than pips
What Is 1 Pip in Gold Trading?
On many retail XAU/USD platforms, 1 pip in gold = $0.10 per ounce. So if gold moves from 2500.10 to 2501.60, the price changed by $1.50, which is usually counted as 15 pips.
This is different from major FX pairs. Gold is quoted in dollars per troy ounce, so the pip convention traders use is tied to the gold price format rather than to the four-decimal structure common in EUR/USD.
How Gold Pips Differ From EUR/USD and USD/JPY
| Instru ment | Common pip size | What that means |
|---|---|---|
| EUR/ USD | 0.0001 | One ten-thousandth of a dollar |
| USD/ JPY | 0.01 | One hundredth of a yen |
| XAU/ USD | 0.10 | Ten cents per ounce on many retail platforms |
The important word is typical. Gold pip naming is not as universal as EUR/USD pip naming, so you should confirm whether your broker displays pips, points, or a smaller tick increment inside the platform specification.
How to Count Gold Pips From a Price Move
If your broker uses 0.10 = 1 pip, the formula is straightforward:
Gold pips = price move in dollars divided by 0.10
- 2500.20 to 2500.70 = $0.50 move = 5 pips
- 2500.20 to 2502.20 = $2.00 move = 20 pips
- 2500.20 to 2497.70 = -$2.50 move = -25 pips
That is the core idea. First measure the dollar move, then divide by 0.10. If your platform defines the symbol differently, use the broker’s contract specification instead of forcing the standard convention.
How Much Is 1 Pip Worth on Gold?
Once you know the pip size, you can calculate the dollar value of 1 pip from the number of ounces you are trading:
Pip value = 0.10 x ounces traded
| Lot size | Ounces | 1 pip | 5 pips | 10 pips |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.01 lot | 1 oz | $0.10 | $0.50 | $1 |
| 0.10 lot | 10 oz | $1 | $5 | $10 |
| 0.50 lot | 50 oz | $5 | $25 | $50 |
| 1.00 lot | 100 oz | $10 | $50 | $100 |
If you still need the lot-size basics, read our guide to how much 1 lot of gold is worth. The lot article and pip article work together.
Gold Pip Value Cheat Sheet: Price Move × Lot Size
The table below cross-references common price moves against lot sizes so you can estimate profit or loss at a glance — no calculator needed.
| Price move | Pips | 0.01 lot (1 oz) | 0.1 lot (10 oz) | 0.5 lot (50 oz) | 1.0 lot (100 oz) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $0.50 | 5 | $0.50 | $5 | $25 | $50 |
| $1.00 | 10 | $1 | $10 | $50 | $100 |
| $2.00 | 20 | $2 | $20 | $100 | $200 |
| $5.00 | 50 | $5 | $50 | $250 | $500 |
| $10.00 | 100 | $10 | $100 | $500 | $1,000 |
| $50.00 | 500 | $50 | $500 | $2,500 | $5,000 |
How to Calculate Profit or Loss From Gold Pips
After counting pips, profit and loss is easy:
Profit or loss = pips moved x pip value
Suppose you buy gold at 2500.30 and sell at 2501.50. That is a $1.20 move, or 12 pips under the common retail convention.
| Lot size | Pip value | P/L on 12 pips |
|---|---|---|
| 0.01 lot | $0.10 | $1.20 |
| 0.10 lot | $1 | $12 |
| 1.00 lot | $10 | $120 |
If your account is not denominated in U.S. dollars, convert the final dollar result into your base currency at the broker’s exchange rate. USD-denominated accounts make the pip math feel cleaner than non-USD accounts.
Why Broker Pip Definitions Differ: $0.01 vs $0.10
There is no industry-wide standard for what counts as “1 pip” in gold. Two conventions exist side by side:
| Convention | 1 pip = | A $1 move = | Used by |
|---|---|---|---|
| Retail standard | $0.10 | 10 pips | Most retail brokers (Exness, XM, IC Markets) |
| Fine-tick | $0.01 | 100 pips | Some cTrader setups, institutional feeds |
If your broker uses $0.01 = 1 pip, the pip count will be 10× larger for the same price move, but the dollar value per pip is 10× smaller — so the actual profit or loss is identical. The danger arises when you mix conventions: entering “100 pip stop-loss” on a $0.10-pip broker gives you a $10 buffer, but on a $0.01-pip broker the same setting allows only $1 of movement.
Always check the contract specification (or “symbol info”) inside your platform before placing any order. In MT4/MT5, right-click the symbol in Market Watch → Specification → look at “Point Size” and “Tick Size” to confirm which convention applies.
Common Gold Pip Mistakes Beginners Make
- Using EUR/USD pip logic on gold without checking the symbol specification
- Confusing points with pips on MT4 or MT5
- Ignoring lot size and assuming 1 pip is always worth the same dollar amount
- Calculating margin correctly but underestimating pip volatility around major news
If you want the bigger framework around gold risk, timing, and trade selection, continue with how to start trading gold, gold trading risks, what moves the gold price, and gold price seasonal patterns.
