Risk of Ruin Calculator
Estimate the probability that a run of trades drives your account down to a chosen ruin threshold, given your win rate, payoff and per-trade risk.
Quick answer: Risk of ruin is the probability that a sequence of trades pushes your capital down to a level you define as unrecoverable before it recovers. This tool estimates it by Monte Carlo simulation: it plays out thousands of long trade sequences using your win rate, per-trade risk and payoff ratio, and reports the fraction that ever breached the threshold. It is the clearest answer to the only question that ultimately matters in risk management: will I still be here to trade tomorrow. A higher win rate, smaller per-trade risk or better payoff lowers the figure.
How to use it
Enter your win rate, the percentage of current capital risked on each trade, the payoff ratio (average win divided by average loss), and the drawdown that you define as ruin. The tool simulates thousands of trade sequences and reports the approximate probability that equity ever falls to the ruin threshold. It is an estimate from random simulation, so the figure moves slightly each run; large input changes move it far more than the random noise does.
Formula
Risk of ruin ≈ ( number of simulated sequences that hit the ruin threshold ) ÷ ( total sequences )
Each trade wins with the given probability and multiplies equity by (1 + risk% × b) on a win or (1 − risk%) on a loss. Ruin is reached when equity falls to (1 − threshold%) of its start. The estimate assumes independent trades with a stable edge, so real regimes and losing clusters can make live ruin risk higher.
Frequently asked questions
Why is risk of ruin the through-line of risk management?
Why can a profitable system still ruin an account?
What counts as ruin?
Why use simulation instead of a formula?
Why does the number change slightly each time?
How do I lower my risk of ruin?
Does the estimate account for correlated positions?
Runs entirely in your browser — no data leaves your device. Illustrative and educational only; real-world charges and market conditions apply in practice.