Quick Answer
In forex, a pip is usually the fourth decimal place for most currency pairs, such as EUR/USD moving from 1.1050 to 1.1051. A point is often the fifth decimal place, such as 1.10500 to 1.10501. This means 10 points usually equal 1 pip.
What Is a Pip?
A pip means “percentage in point” or “price interest point.” It is the common unit traders use to describe forex price movement. If EUR/USD moves from 1.1000 to 1.1010, that is a 10-pip move.
What Is a Point?
A point is often the smallest price increment displayed by your broker. With 5-digit pricing, EUR/USD may be shown as 1.10000. If it moves to 1.10001, that is 1 point. Ten of those points make 1 pip.
4-Digit vs 5-Digit Pricing
| Quote Type | Example | 1 Pip | 1 Point |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4-digit EUR/USD | 1.1050 | 0.0001 | Often same as pip |
| 5-digit EUR/USD | 1.10500 | 0.00010 | 0.00001 |
| 2-digit USD/JPY | 150.25 | 0.01 | Often same as pip |
| 3-digit USD/JPY | 150.250 | 0.010 | 0.001 |
Green digit = pip area. Yellow digit = point / fractional pip area on 5-digit pricing.
Why Traders Confuse Pips and Points
Many brokers display prices with an extra decimal digit. Beginners see a price move by 50 points and think it means 50 pips, while it may actually mean only 5 pips.
Common Examples
| Move | Points | Pips |
|---|---|---|
| EUR/USD 1.10000 → 1.10010 | 10 points | 1 pip |
| EUR/USD 1.10000 → 1.10100 | 100 points | 10 pips |
| USD/JPY 150.000 → 150.010 | 10 points | 1 pip |
| USD/JPY 150.000 → 150.100 | 100 points | 10 pips |
How CashBak.io Fits In
Understanding pips and points helps traders calculate costs more accurately. CashBak.io helps traders earn cashback with supported brokers, which may reduce effective trading costs over time.
