Take profit is an automatic mechanism for closing a position when the target profit price is reached. Along with stop-loss, these are the main risk management tools for every trader in the spot market. When you set a take profit, your asset is automatically sold at the specified price, allowing you to lock in profits without constantly monitoring the market.
Why are take profit and stop-loss critical for risk management
TP (take profit) and SL (stop-loss) orders allow traders to set desired profit and loss limits. TP reduces emotional decision-making risk when the price rises sharply, while SL prevents significant losses during unfavorable market movements. In volatile markets, these tools become especially important.
Assets are reserved at the moment of placing TP/SL orders, ensuring their availability for execution. This distinguishes TP/SL from conditional orders, where reservation occurs only upon activation.
How TP/SL, OCO, and conditional orders differ
Order Type
When assets are reserved
Main feature
Take profit / Stop-loss (TP/SL)
At placement
Assets are reserved immediately
OCO (One Cancels the Other)
At placement
Only one side of the margin is reserved; canceling one half releases the other
Conditional order
When trigger price is reached
Assets are reserved only after activation
This division allows traders to choose the most convenient option depending on their strategy.
How take profit works: detailed breakdown
When you place a TP/SL order via the Gate.io interface, you set three key parameters:
Trigger price — the level at which the order is triggered
Order price — the price at which the trade will be executed (for limit orders)
Asset amount — the volume to sell
As soon as the last trade price reaches the set trigger price, either a market order (executed immediately at the best available price) or a limit order (placed in the order book for execution at the desired price) is activated.
Important: Market orders are executed on an IOC (Immediate Or Cancel) basis. If liquidity is insufficient, the unfilled portion of the order will be automatically canceled. Limit orders wait in the order book, but their execution depends on price movement and liquidity.
Practical trading examples with take profit
Scenario 1: Market sell order
Current BTC price — 20,000 USDT. You set:
Trigger price: 19,000 USDT
Type: Market order
When the price drops to 19,000 USDT, the order triggers, and your BTC is instantly sold at the best available market price.
Scenario 2: Limit buy order
Current BTC price — 20,000 USDT. You set for take profit:
Trigger price: 21,000 USDT
Order price: 20,000 USDT
When the price rises to 21,000 USDT, a limit order is placed in the order book at 20,000 USDT and waits for execution. When the price drops to 20,000 USDT, the order is executed.
Scenario 3: Limit take profit during price increase
Trigger price set at 21,000 USDT, order price — 21,000 USDT. If after activation the best bid price is 21,050 USDT, the order executes instantly at the better price. If the price falls below 21,000 USDT, the order remains in the order book.
Complex example: pre-set TP/SL
A trader places a limit buy order for BTC at 40,000 USDT (1 BTC) and simultaneously sets:
Take profit: trigger price 50,000 USDT, order price 50,500 USDT
Stop-loss: trigger price 30,000 USDT, market order
When the limit buy order at 40,000 USDT is filled, both TP and SL orders are activated. If the price rises to 50,000 USDT, the take profit triggers and the SL is automatically canceled. If the price drops to 30,000 USDT, the SL triggers, and 1 BTC is sold at the market price.
Critical point: When one order (TP or SL) triggers, the other is automatically canceled, even if the limit order has not yet been executed. In case of a price rebound, this may result in the remaining order not being filled.
Key rules and limitations
To properly use take profit, consider the following restrictions:
For buy TP: trigger price must be higher than the limit order price, and trigger SL lower
For sell TP: trigger price must be lower than the limit order price, and trigger SL higher
Price limits: the TP/SL order price cannot exceed the contract’s set limits. For example, for BTC/USDT with a 3% limit, the buy TP price must not exceed 103% of the trigger price
Minimum volume: if the order volume after executing the limit order does not meet minimum requirements, TP/SL may not be placed
Maximum volume differences: market orders have different volume limits than limit orders. If the limit order volume exceeds the maximum for market orders, placement will be rejected
Detailed limits for each trading pair can be found in the official Gate.io spot trading rules.
Proper use of take profit allows traders to automate profit and risk management, making spot trading more disciplined and predictable.
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What is take-profit and how to use it in spot trading on Gate.io
Take profit is an automatic mechanism for closing a position when the target profit price is reached. Along with stop-loss, these are the main risk management tools for every trader in the spot market. When you set a take profit, your asset is automatically sold at the specified price, allowing you to lock in profits without constantly monitoring the market.
Why are take profit and stop-loss critical for risk management
TP (take profit) and SL (stop-loss) orders allow traders to set desired profit and loss limits. TP reduces emotional decision-making risk when the price rises sharply, while SL prevents significant losses during unfavorable market movements. In volatile markets, these tools become especially important.
Assets are reserved at the moment of placing TP/SL orders, ensuring their availability for execution. This distinguishes TP/SL from conditional orders, where reservation occurs only upon activation.
How TP/SL, OCO, and conditional orders differ
This division allows traders to choose the most convenient option depending on their strategy.
How take profit works: detailed breakdown
When you place a TP/SL order via the Gate.io interface, you set three key parameters:
As soon as the last trade price reaches the set trigger price, either a market order (executed immediately at the best available price) or a limit order (placed in the order book for execution at the desired price) is activated.
Important: Market orders are executed on an IOC (Immediate Or Cancel) basis. If liquidity is insufficient, the unfilled portion of the order will be automatically canceled. Limit orders wait in the order book, but their execution depends on price movement and liquidity.
Practical trading examples with take profit
Scenario 1: Market sell order
Current BTC price — 20,000 USDT. You set:
When the price drops to 19,000 USDT, the order triggers, and your BTC is instantly sold at the best available market price.
Scenario 2: Limit buy order
Current BTC price — 20,000 USDT. You set for take profit:
When the price rises to 21,000 USDT, a limit order is placed in the order book at 20,000 USDT and waits for execution. When the price drops to 20,000 USDT, the order is executed.
Scenario 3: Limit take profit during price increase
Trigger price set at 21,000 USDT, order price — 21,000 USDT. If after activation the best bid price is 21,050 USDT, the order executes instantly at the better price. If the price falls below 21,000 USDT, the order remains in the order book.
Complex example: pre-set TP/SL
A trader places a limit buy order for BTC at 40,000 USDT (1 BTC) and simultaneously sets:
When the limit buy order at 40,000 USDT is filled, both TP and SL orders are activated. If the price rises to 50,000 USDT, the take profit triggers and the SL is automatically canceled. If the price drops to 30,000 USDT, the SL triggers, and 1 BTC is sold at the market price.
Critical point: When one order (TP or SL) triggers, the other is automatically canceled, even if the limit order has not yet been executed. In case of a price rebound, this may result in the remaining order not being filled.
Key rules and limitations
To properly use take profit, consider the following restrictions:
Detailed limits for each trading pair can be found in the official Gate.io spot trading rules.
Proper use of take profit allows traders to automate profit and risk management, making spot trading more disciplined and predictable.