Post-Trade Review Checklist
A clean debrief of every closed trade, built to judge the quality of the decision separately from the luck of the outcome, so the right lessons survive.
Post-Trade Checklist: After a trade closes, review it to learn, not to celebrate or punish. Record the result in R-multiples, confirm you followed your stop, size and plan, log real costs and slippage, and grade the decision on process rather than on whether it happened to win. A well-managed loss is a good trade and a reckless win is a bad one; the review protects that distinction. This is educational reflection, not a signal.
The post-trade review is where improvement actually happens, but only if it separates the quality of your decision from the randomness of the result. A single trade tells you little about your edge; a well-followed plan that lost is a good trade, and a rule-breaking bet that won is a bad one that got lucky. Reviewing without that lens teaches the wrong lessons. Keep the debrief short, honest and consistent, ideally logged in a journal you can aggregate later in the weekly review.
Record the facts
- Log entry, exit, stop, size and the instrument, including the NSE lot count and strike or expiry for options.
- Record the result as an R-multiple: outcome ÷ the initial 1R risk, so a ₹3,000 risk that made ₹6,000 is +2R.
- Note the actual rupee risk taken versus the planned risk, to catch silent size creep.
- Record all costs, brokerage, STT, exchange fees, GST and the slippage between intended and actual fills.
- Note the maximum adverse excursion (how far it went against you) and maximum favourable excursion (how far in your favour), to judge stop and target placement.
- Timestamp the trade so you can later spot patterns by time of day, day of week or proximity to expiry.
Grade the decision, not the outcome
- Confirm you sized the position from the stop and within your per-trade risk limit; a win that broke this rule is still a process failure.
- Confirm you honoured the stop and did not widen it or average down outside plan.
- Check whether the entry matched a real setup in your plan or was an impulse, FOMO or revenge trade.
- Judge the trade as good or bad on process alone: did you follow your rules, regardless of profit or loss?
- Identify any luck in the result, a favourable gap or a lucky fill, so you do not mistake it for skill.
- Note whether the exit followed your written plan or was an emotional early or late exit.
- Confirm the trade did not quietly breach portfolio heat or correlation limits when combined with others open at the time.
Capture the lesson
- Write one specific, repeatable lesson, an action to keep or to change, not a vague resolution.
- Note your emotional state during the trade, calm, anxious, greedy or fearful, and whether it affected decisions.
- Flag any rule you broke, so repeated breaks show up as a pattern rather than one-off excuses.
- Record whether the setup actually behaves as your strategy expects, feeding the wider question of whether the edge is real.
- Add the trade to your running log so metrics like win rate, average R and expectancy stay current.
- Avoid over-reacting to a single result; one trade is a sample of one, and changing a system after every loss is itself a mistake.
Done consistently, these debriefs turn scattered trades into data you can actually learn from. Aggregate them in the weekly and monthly reviews to see the process behind the numbers.
Frequently asked questions
What is an R-multiple and why record it?
How do I judge a trade that lost money?
Why is a winning trade sometimes a bad trade?
Should I change my strategy after a losing trade?
What should I log about costs and slippage?
How long should a post-trade review take?
Last reviewed 12 July 2026. Educational content only — not investment advice.