What Is Liquidation? How Forced Position Closing Works in Futures
Liquidation is when a platform automatically force-closes your leveraged position because your losses have consumed the collateral (margin) backing it. It is the single most important risk in futures trading — and understanding it is the difference between managing risk and being surprised by it.
Liquidation is not a penalty invented by crypto exchanges. Any margin-based market — forex, stock margin accounts, commodity futures — closes positions that can no longer be covered by their collateral. The mechanics below are anchored in crypto futures, but the principle is universal.
How Liquidation Works
When you open a leveraged position, you post margin. As the market moves against you, that margin absorbs the loss. When your losses approach the maintenance margin — the minimum collateral required to keep the position open — the platform closes the position to stop it going negative. That closing is liquidation.
A worked example: you open a 10x long on BTC at 100 USDT margin (a 1,000 USDT position).
- Every 1% BTC falls, you lose about 10 USDT (1% of 1,000).
- After roughly a 10% drop, your ~100 USDT margin is exhausted.
- At that point the position is liquidated — closed automatically, and your margin is lost.
The rough rule: at X times leverage, a move of about (100 / X)% against you brings liquidation. Higher leverage = a closer liquidation price = less room for the market to breathe.
Why It Matters to a Trader
Liquidation is where leverage stops being abstract. It defines your true worst case on a position: the loss of your posted margin, at a price you do not choose. Many beginners focus on the upside multiple and never calculate their liquidation price — the exact level at which the position dies. Knowing that number before you enter is the core of survival.
Two things push the liquidation price closer:
- Higher leverage — a thinner margin buffer.
- Cross margin vs isolated — cross margin pulls from your whole balance (harder to liquidate but risks more of your account); isolated margin caps the loss to that position but liquidates sooner.
The Risk Section — This Is the Risk
- You do not control the timing. The market triggers liquidation, often during fast, volatile moves — exactly when you can least react.
- Liquidation is usually final for that margin. Once closed, the loss is realised; a later price recovery does not bring the position back.
- Fees and slippage around liquidation can make the realised loss slightly worse than the theoretical level.
- Cascading liquidations in volatile markets can accelerate price moves, making the environment even more dangerous.
There is no technique that guarantees you avoid liquidation while using leverage. You can only reduce its probability: lower leverage, stop-losses set before the liquidation price, and conservative position sizing.
A Practical Next Step
The safest way to feel how liquidation works is to trigger a few — with simulated money. WEEX offers a demo futures mode with virtual funds where you can watch a position approach and hit its liquidation price without losing anything real. Do that until the mechanics are second nature. On real funds, always know your liquidation price before entering, keep leverage low, and place a stop-loss above (for shorts) or below (for longs) that level.
Download the WEEX app, open futures, and practise in demo mode first.
FAQ
Q. What exactly is a liquidation price? A. The price at which your losses exhaust your maintenance margin and the platform force-closes the position. Most futures interfaces display it for each open position.
Q. Can I avoid liquidation? A. You can lower the risk — use lower leverage, add margin, or set a stop-loss before the liquidation level — but no method removes the risk entirely while leveraged.
Q. Do I lose everything if I'm liquidated? A. You typically lose the margin backing that position. Crypto futures are generally designed to cap the loss at your margin; confirm the exact terms on your platform.
Q. What is the difference between a stop-loss and liquidation? A. A stop-loss is a level you set to exit early and limit loss. Liquidation is a forced close by the platform when margin runs out. A well-placed stop-loss triggers before liquidation would.
This article is general educational information about trading terminology, not investment advice. Leveraged futures trading carries a high risk of loss and guarantees no profit. Trade at your own responsibility.
Disclaimer: This content is provided for general branding and informational purposes only and doesn't constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Any events, rewards, online events, or related information mentioned herein should not be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or invitation to purchase, sell, trade, or otherwise deal in any crypto assets or to use any services. Crypto assets are highly volatile and may result in loss. WEEX services and online events may not be available in all regions and are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and eligibility requirements. You are responsible for ensuring that your use of WEEX services complies with local laws and for carefully assessing the risks before participating in any crypto-related activities.
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