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How to Trade Forex and Avoid Costly Mistakes

How to Trade Forex and Avoid Costly Mistakes

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Vantage is a global, multi-asset broker with a team of in-house writers and market analysts who produce educational and insightful trading content for traders of all levels.

Vantage Updated Sun, 2026 May 17 07:11

The forex market is the largest financial market in the world, with average daily turnover reaching $9.6 trillion in April 2025 [1]. Its size has made forex trading widely followed by traders across different countries, from those comparing major currency pairs to those learning how global economic events affect exchange rates.

Before placing a first trade, it is important to understand how forex trading works, what products are available in your country, and whether the broker or platform you use is authorised to offer those services.

Forex trading rules differ across jurisdictions. Whether you are trading from your home country, living abroad, or comparing platforms across regions, you should check local regulations, broker authorisation, product availability, costs, and the risks linked to leveraged trading.

Key Points

  • Forex trading rules vary by country, so traders should check local regulations, broker authorisation, and product availability before opening an account.
  • A structured process can help beginners understand currency pairs, market drivers, platform features, order types, and key trading risks.
  • Risk management is central to forex trading because leverage, volatility, liquidity, and market events can all affect trading outcomes.

How to Start Forex Trading

Getting started in forex trading is less about rushing into the market and more about building a clear process. Here is a breakdown of how to get started:

Key Steps to Start Forex Trading
Image 1: Key Steps to Start Forex Trading

Step 1: Learn the Fundamentals

Understand how currency pairs move, what affects exchange rates, and how leverage can increase both gains and losses. Get familiar with futures and options, learn to read candlestick charts, and use basic tools such as support and resistance, moving averages, RSI, and MACD.

Forex markets are influenced by a wide range of factors, including central bank policy, inflation data, interest rate expectations, employment reports, commodity prices, and geopolitical developments.

A solid foundation protects you from costly beginner mistakes. Do not skip this step in a rush to start trading. For a more structured introduction, explore our forex beginner course.

Step 2: Choose A Regulated Broker

Choose a broker that is authorised to offer forex or forex CFD products in your country or region. Broker rules, account access, product availability, leverage limits, and payment methods can vary depending on the entity and jurisdiction.

When comparing brokers, users commonly review:

  • Trading Costs: Spreads, commissions, overnight fees, and other account charges.
  • Platform Quality: Access to platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, web trading, or mobile apps.
  • Market Access: The currency pairs and CFD products available under the relevant broker entity.
  • Risk Tools: Stop-loss orders, margin alerts, price alerts, and account monitoring features.
  • Support And Education: Customer support availability, platform guides, and educational resources.

Before opening an account, check the broker’s legal documents, regulatory details, and official website. Where possible, compare those details with the relevant regulator’s public register.

Step 3: Complete Account Verification

Once you choose a broker, you will first need to open your trading account. After that, you will need to complete its KYC and account verification process before you can begin trading. This may involve submitting identity documents, proof of address, and account-related information.

The exact requirements can vary by country, broker entity, and account type. In some cases, additional checks may apply before certain products or features become available.

Step 4: Fund Your Account

Fund your account with a conservative amount that fits your budget and risk tolerance. The minimum deposit and margin required will vary by broker, product type, and market conditions. 

Only use funds you can afford to put at risk. It also helps to set a clear monthly trading budget and treat it as a fixed limit.

Step 5: Select Your Currency Pair and Analyse the Market

Many traders begin with major currency pairs because they tend to have higher liquidity and tighter spreads. Common examples include EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY, AUD/USD, and USD/CAD, although availability depends on the broker and jurisdiction.

Market analysis usually combines both technical and fundamental factors:

  • Technical: Moving averages, RSI, MACD, candlestick patterns, support and resistance
  • Fundamental: Central bank decisions, inflation data (CPI), US Non-Farm Payrolls, economic growth figures, commodity prices, and geopolitical developments.

Check an economic calendar daily. Volatility around major data releases can move currency pairs sharply, and entering a position without knowing what announcements are scheduled is a common and costly oversight.

Step 6: Place Your Trade with a Stop-Loss and Take-Profit Order

Before entering a trade, define three things: 

  1. Entry price
  2. Stop-loss level
  3. Take-profit target

These are the basic controls that help keep risk in check.

Some traders commonly risk around 1%–2% of their total trading capital on a single trade as part of their risk management approach. As part of forex risk management, place your stop-loss at a logical technical level, such as below support for a buy trade or above resistance for a sell trade.

A risk-to-reward ratio of around 1:1.5 to 1:2 is often used by traders as a general reference, depending on strategy and market conditions. Once the trade is live, let your orders manage the outcome. Changing your stop-loss after entering the trade can lead to larger losses than you originally planned for.

Step 7: Review, Journal, and Refine Your Strategy

After each trading session, record the key details of every trade, including your entry and exit price, position size, reasoning, and outcome.

Reviewing your journal regularly can help you spot patterns in your decisions, including what worked well and what needs improvement.

Use this record to adjust your strategy based on your own trading results rather than instinct or outside opinions. As market conditions change over time, regular review can help you keep your approach relevant and consistent.

Over time, a structured trading plan can help turn these review habits into a more disciplined and repeatable approach.

Which Currency Pairs Can You Trade?

The currency pairs available to traders depend on the broker, platform, account type, and local regulations. Some brokers offer major, minor, and exotic currency pairs, while others may provide a more limited selection based on local rules.

Common major currency pairs include:

  • EUR/USD (Euro / US dollar)
  • GBP/USD (British pound / US dollar)
  • USD/JPY (US dollar / Japanese yen)
  • USD/CHF (US dollar / Swiss franc)
  • AUD/USD (Australian dollar / US dollar)
  • USD/CAD (US dollar / Canadian dollar)
  • NZD/USD (New Zealand dollar / US dollar)

Major pairs are usually more actively traded than minor or exotic pairs. This can support deeper liquidity, although spreads and execution quality can still vary by market conditions and broker infrastructure.

Before trading any currency pair, users should check whether the product is available in their country and whether it is offered as spot forex, exchange-traded currency derivatives, or forex CFDs.

EUR/USD price chart from January 2025 to April 2026
Chart 1: Example of EUR/USD from January 2025 to April 2026. Source: https://www.tradingview.com/x/adP1JLXH/ 

EUR/USD moved in a broad upward trend from early 2025, rising from around 1.03 to a peak above 1.20 in early 2026. After that move, the pair pulled back and traded within a wider consolidation range, with price action mostly holding between the 1.14 and 1.18 areas.

More recently, EUR/USD recovered from its March lows and traded near 1.1780. The pair was testing the upper side of its recent range, although momentum appeared more mixed after the April rebound. Price levels around 1.18 may be monitored by market participants in the context of broader momentum and resistance areas, depending on prevailing market conditions.

How Forex Trading Is Regulated?

Forex trading is regulated differently across countries. In some jurisdictions, retail traders can access forex through regulated CFD brokers. In others, forex may only be available through exchange-listed currency products, domestic brokers, or specific approved platforms.

Regulators may set rules around:

  • Broker licensing and authorisation
  • Client fund protection
  • Leverage limits
  • Risk disclosures
  • Product availability
  • Marketing and advertising
  • Complaints and dispute resolution

Because the rules vary by region, traders should check the regulator or financial authority that applies in their country. They should also review the broker entity they are opening an account with, as larger brokers may operate through different entities in different jurisdictions.

For a more detailed explanation, read our article: Is Forex Trading Legal?

Popular Forex Trading Strategies

Not all traders approach the forex market in the same way. The method used often depends on factors such as trading experience, available time, risk tolerance, market conditions, and personal objectives.

  • Day Trading: This involves opening and closing positions within the same trading day. It usually requires close market monitoring, faster decision-making, and disciplined risk controls.
  • Swing Trading: This approach involves holding positions for several days or weeks to study broader market moves. Swing traders often monitor technical levels alongside macroeconomic data, central bank policy, and market sentiment.
  • Position Trading: This longer-term approach focuses on broader market trends. It may involve holding positions over weeks or months and requires close attention to interest rate expectations, economic cycles, and major geopolitical developments.
  • Range Trading: This approach studies markets that move between defined support and resistance levels. It is commonly used when prices show limited directional momentum.

These are only a few of the ways traders approach the forex market. For a broader overview of other methods and styles, read our article on 10 Forex Trading Strategies For Different Trading Styles

Key Risks Of Forex Trading

Before trading forex, it helps to understand that risk does not come from price movement alone. Market conditions, leverage, liquidity, regulation, timing, and trader behaviour can all affect trading outcomes.

RiskWhat It MeansWhy It Matters
Leverage riskMargin trading increases both gains and losses. Even a small move against your position can lead to a much larger loss relative to your deposit.This is one of the main reasons traders can lose money quickly in the forex market.
Liquidity riskSome currency pairs are easier to buy or sell than others, especially during active market hours. Outside peak hours or near contract expiry, liquidity may fall.Lower liquidity can make it harder to exit a trade at the expected price, which may lead to slippage.
Event riskPrices can move sharply around central bank decisions, inflation data, employment reports, or geopolitical developments.Sudden volatility can lead to larger-than-expected price swings.
Regulatory riskForex rules can differ by country and may change over time.Changes may affect product availability, leverage limits, broker access, or payment methods.
Psychological riskEmotions can affect decision-making, especially after losses or during periods of volatility.Overtrading, chasing losses, or abandoning a plan can weaken consistency over time.
Counterparty riskOn unauthorised offshore platforms, there may be no local regulatory protection if the broker delays withdrawals, shuts down, or acts unfairly.This adds another layer of risk beyond the trade itself.
Table 1: Key Risks To Consider When Trading Forex CFDs

Taken together, these risks show that forex trading involves more than choosing a currency pair. Regulation, product access, platform quality, and trading discipline all play an important role.

A More Disciplined Approach To Forex Trading

Forex trading is available in certain jurisdictions through regulated platforms, but access does not mean the rules are the same everywhere. The starting point is to understand how forex trading is regulated in your country, which products are available, and whether the broker is authorised to provide those services.

For beginners, the focus is often less on finding the “perfect” trade and more on building a clear process. Learning the basics, reviewing risk, checking broker details, and keeping a trading journal can support a more structured approach over time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is forex trading legal?

Forex trading is legal in many countries, but the rules vary by jurisdiction. Some countries allow forex or forex CFD trading through regulated brokers, while others restrict certain products, platforms, leverage levels, or offshore access.

Users should check the rules that apply in their home country before using a forex trading platform.

What is the best time to trade forex?

The most active forex trading times often occur when major market sessions overlap, such as the London and New York sessions. However, the most suitable trading time can depend on the currency pair, trading strategy, market conditions, and the trader’s time zone.

For a fuller breakdown, read our guide on the best time to trade forex.

How is forex trading taxed?

Forex trading tax treatment varies by country and may depend on whether the activity is classified as investment income, business income, capital gains, or another category. Traders should check the tax rules that apply in their country and seek independent tax guidance where needed.

What Should You Look For In A Forex Trading App?

A forex trading app can be compared based on regulation, platform stability, charting tools, order types, execution features, account management, funding options, and risk-management tools. Product availability may vary by country, broker entity, and account type.

Can I trade EUR/USD?

EUR/USD is one of the most actively traded currency pairs globally. However, whether it is available to a retail trader depends on the broker, product type, account entity, and local regulations. Some users may access EUR/USD through forex CFDs, while others may be limited to exchange-traded currency products or locally approved instruments.

What happens if I trade on an unauthorised forex platform?

Using an unauthorised forex platform may expose users to legal, financial, and operational risks. These can include limited complaint channels, reduced regulatory protection, withdrawal issues, or restricted access to dispute resolution. Users should check whether a broker is authorised to offer services in their country before opening an account.

Do I need a separate account for forex trading?

This depends on the broker and the products available in your country. Some brokers allow users to access forex, commodities, indices, and share CFDs from one account. Others may require separate account permissions, platform access, or product approvals.

RISK WARNING: CFDs are complex financial instruments and carry a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. You should ensure you fully understand the risks involved and carefully consider whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money before trading.  

Disclaimer: The information is provided for educational purposes only and doesn’t take into account your personal objectives, financial circumstances, or needs. It does not constitute investment advice. We encourage you to seek independent advice if necessary. The information has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research. No representation or warranty is given as to the accuracy or completeness of any information contained within. This material may contain historical or past performance figures and should not be relied on. Furthermore estimates, forward-looking statements, and forecasts cannot be guaranteed. The information on this site and the products and services offered are not intended for distribution to any person in any country or jurisdiction where such distribution or use would be contrary to local law or regulation.

References

  1. Global FX trading hits $9.6 trillion per day in April 2025 and OTC interest rate derivatives surge to $7.9 trillion: Triennial Survey – BIS” https://www.bis.org/press/p250930.htm Accessed 21 April 2026
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