Margin Level

Margin level is the ratio of equity to used margin in a forex trading account, expressed as a percentage, that determines ability to open new positions.

What it means in practice

Margin level is a critical metric in forex and CFD trading that measures the health of a trading account. It is calculated as (Equity / Used Margin) x 100 and expressed as a percentage. When a trader has no open positions, the margin level is undefined because there is no used margin. As positions are opened and margin is consumed, the margin level drops. A high margin level indicates the account has significant free margin relative to its exposure, while a low margin level signals that the account is approaching its capacity or risk threshold.

Brokers use margin level as the primary trigger for protective actions. When margin level falls below a defined threshold — commonly 100% — the broker issues a margin call, warning the trader that their account is underfunded relative to open positions. If margin level drops further to the stop-out level (often 20-50%), the broker begins automatically closing positions to prevent the account from going negative. These thresholds vary by broker, regulatory jurisdiction, and account type, and they directly affect how aggressively traders can use leverage.

For introducing brokers and affiliates in the forex vertical, understanding margin level is operationally important because it influences client trading behavior and, by extension, trading volume. Clients who frequently hit margin calls may reduce their activity or churn entirely, reducing the IB's long-term lot-based commission revenue. Educating referred traders about margin management can help IBs maintain more active, longer-lived client relationships.

How Margin Level works across industries

See how margin level is applied in the verticals Track360 supports, from qualification logic and payout structure to the operational context behind each model.

Forex

Margin Level in Forex partner and IB models

In retail forex, margin levels are closely regulated in many jurisdictions. ESMA rules in Europe, for example, cap retail leverage at 30:1 for major pairs, which directly affects how quickly margin level deteriorates on losing trades. Brokers operating under different regulatory frameworks offer varying leverage and margin call thresholds, making margin level behavior a meaningful differentiator for traders choosing a broker through an IB referral.
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Prop Trading

Margin Level in prop trading acquisition flows

Prop trading firms monitor margin level as part of their [risk rules](/glossary/prop-firm-risk-rules). Traders in evaluation or funded phases who approach margin call territory may violate [daily loss limits](/glossary/daily-loss-limit) or [drawdown](/glossary/drawdown) rules before the broker's stop-out mechanism activates. This means prop firm margin level thresholds are often stricter than retail broker defaults, requiring traders to manage positions more conservatively.
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How Track360 handles this

Track360 integrates with trading platforms to capture account-level metrics including margin utilization data. This allows operators to correlate trader margin behavior with affiliate referral quality, supporting data-driven commission adjustments and partner performance analysis.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about margin level, how it works in affiliate programs, and where it shows up across Track360's supported verticals.

Margin level is calculated as (Equity / Used Margin) x 100. Equity is the account balance plus or minus unrealized profit or loss on open positions. Used margin is the amount of capital reserved by the broker to maintain open positions. A margin level of 500% means the account has five times more equity than the margin being used.

Related Terms

Forex & IB

Margin Call

ForexProp Trading
Read Definition

A margin call is a broker notification triggered when a trader's account equity falls below the required maintenance margin, risking position liquidation.

Forex & IBRead More →
Forex & IB

Leverage

ForexProp Trading
Read Definition

Leverage allows traders to control a larger position size with a smaller capital outlay, amplifying both potential gains and losses proportionally.

Forex & IBRead More →
Prop Trading

Drawdown

Prop Trading
Read Definition

Drawdown is the maximum loss a trader is allowed to incur -- either in a single day or cumulatively -- before their challenge or funded account is terminated by the prop trading firm.

Prop TradingRead More →
Forex & IB

Lot Size

ForexProp Trading
Read Definition

Lot size is the standardized unit of measurement for a trade in forex, defining the number of currency units bought or sold in a single transaction.

Forex & IBRead More →
Forex & IB

Pip Value

Forex
Read Definition

The monetary value of a single pip movement in a forex trade, which varies by currency pair, lot size, and account currency. Pip value is used as a basis for calculating IB commissions in spread-based and pip rebate models.

Forex & IBRead More →
Forex & IB

Spread

Forex
Read Definition

The spread is the difference between the bid (sell) and ask (buy) price of a financial instrument, serving as a primary revenue source for Forex brokers and a basis for spread-based affiliate commissions.

Forex & IBRead More →
From the Blog

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