Futures trading opens the opportunity to profit not only when the price rises but also when it falls. Two key concepts in this world are long (Long) and short (Short). Understanding these positions is the foundation for any trader who wants to use leverage and trade futures. In this guide, I will explain in simple terms what it means to “go long” and “go short”, how to calculate profit and loss, what liquidation is and how to avoid it, and provide real examples and strategies for beginners.
Futures trading with leverage is an extremely risky instrument. You can lose all your money in seconds during a sharp market move. Never use leverage higher than 2x-3x until you understand risk management. Start with small amounts ($10-50) and always use a Stop Loss on every trade.
1. 📖 What Is a Long Position in Simple Words
Long (Long) is a position that a trader opens when expecting the price to rise. In everyday life, you constantly open longs: you buy apples at the market hoping they won’t spoil, or you buy an apartment expecting its price to increase. In crypto trading, it’s the same. You buy Bitcoin at $80,000 and sell it a month later at $100,000 — your profit is $20,000. This is a pure long without leverage.
With leverage (e.g., 10x), you can buy $80,000 worth of Bitcoin with only $8,000 of your own funds (the remaining $72,000 is borrowed from the exchange). If the price rises to $100,000, your profit is the same $20,000, but you only invested $8,000. That’s a 250% return instead of 25% without leverage. However, if the price drops 10%, you lose all $8,000 (liquidation).
| Parameter | Long without leverage (1x) | Long with 10x leverage |
|---|---|---|
| Your funds | $80,000 | $8,000 |
| Borrowed funds | $0 | $72,000 |
| Total BTC purchased | $80,000 | $80,000 |
| Entry price | $80,000 | $80,000 |
| Exit price | $100,000 | $100,000 |
| Profit | $20,000 (25%) | $20,000 (250%) | Loss on 10% drop | $8,000 (10%) | $8,000 (100% — liquidation) |
You believe Bitcoin will rise from $85,000 to $95,000. You open a long position with 5x leverage, investing 100 USDT. The exchange gives you an additional 400 USDT (5x leverage), and you buy BTC worth 500 USDT. The price increases by 10% (to $93,500). Your profit: 10% × 500 USDT = 50 USDT (50% return on your 100 USDT deposit). Without leverage, you would have earned only 10 USDT.
2. 📉 What Is a Short Position in Simple Words
Short (Short) is a position that a trader opens when expecting the price to fall. In everyday life, shorts are less familiar: you cannot “sell apples you don’t have”. But in crypto trading, it’s possible. The exchange allows you to borrow an asset, sell it at the current price, then buy it back cheaper and return the loan. The difference is your profit.
Example: You believe Ethereum will drop from $4,000 to $3,500. You open a short: borrow 1 ETH ($4,000), immediately sell it for $4,000. When the price drops to $3,500, you buy 1 ETH for $3,500 and return the borrowed ETH. Your profit: $4,000 – $3,500 = $500. You made money from a price drop! Without leverage, the return is 12.5%. With 5x leverage (investing $800), the return is 62.5%.
You analyze the market and believe Solana ($200) is overheated and will drop to $160. You open a short with 4x leverage, investing 50 SOL (≈$10,000). The exchange lends you 150 SOL (4x leverage), you sell 200 SOL at $200 — receiving $40,000. The price drops to $160. You buy 200 SOL for $32,000 and return the loan. Profit: $8,000 (80% return on your deposit).
3. 🔢 Leverage: How It Works and Why It’s Dangerous
Leverage is the ratio of borrowed funds to your own funds. It is denoted as 2x, 5x, 10x, 50x, 100x. For example, 10x leverage means for every $1 of your money, the exchange adds $9 borrowed. You trade with $10 but risk only your $1. However, losses are also multiplied by 10! If the price moves against you by 10%, you lose all your money (liquidation).
How is liquidation calculated? Liquidation occurs when your loss equals your initial margin. For a long: liquidation price = entry price × (1 – 1/leverage). For a short: liquidation price = entry price × (1 + 1/leverage).
| Leverage | Your funds | Borrowed funds | Total position | Price move to liquidation (long) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2x | $50 | $50 | $100 | 50% |
| 5x | $20 | $80 | $100 | 20% |
| 10x | $10 | $90 | $100 | 10% |
| 25x | $4 | $96 | $100 | 4% |
| 50x | $2 | $98 | $100 | 2% |
| 100x | $1 | $99 | $100 | 1% |
- 📉 100x leverage — a mere 1% move against your position wipes out all your money. In a highly volatile market, this can happen in 5-10 seconds.
- 🛡️ For beginners, recommended leverage: 2x-3x. This gives a 33-50% safety margin, which is much safer.
- 🎯 Always use a Stop Loss — automatic position closure at a certain loss level. This will save your deposit from liquidation.
4. ⚖️ Long vs Short: Comparison Table
| Criterion | LONG | SHORT |
|---|---|---|
| Market expectation | Price rising | Price falling |
| First action | Buy asset | Sell asset (borrow first) |
| Second action | Sell asset | Buy asset (return loan) |
| Profit | Difference (sell price – buy price) | Difference (sell price – buy price) |
| Maximum loss | Theoretically unlimited (price can rise infinitely) — but in practice, the exchange liquidates you | Theoretically unlimited (price can rise infinitely, and you sold borrowed coins) — the most dangerous aspect of shorts |
| Liquidation | Price drops by 1/leverage | Price rises by 1/leverage |
| Best for | Bull market (uptrend), buying the dip | Bear market (downtrend), selling the top |
Shorts are potentially more dangerous than longs because prices can rise infinitely. In a long, you cannot lose more than you invested — the maximum loss if the price goes to zero is 100% of your deposit. In a short, if the price rises 200%, your theoretical loss could exceed your deposit (but the exchange will liquidate you earlier). This is why shorts are considered riskier.
5. 🛡️ Risk Management: Stop Loss, Take Profit, Position Sizing
A successful trader differs from an unsuccessful one not by how often they predict direction, but by how they manage risk. Three main tools:
Golden rule: risk no more than 1-2% of deposit per trade. If your deposit is $1,000, the maximum loss per trade should be $10-20.
Position size = (Deposit × Risk percentage) / (Entry price – Stop Loss) × Leverage
Example: Deposit $1,000, risk 1% ($10), entry price $80,000, Stop Loss $79,000 (difference $1,000). Leverage 10x. Position size = ($1,000 × 0.01) / ($80,000 – $79,000) × 10 = $10 / $1,000 × 10 = 0.01 BTC (≈$800). You risk only $10 but trade $800.
- ❌ No Stop Loss — hoping the market will “reverse”. 90% of such trades end in liquidation.
- ❌ Too much leverage (50x-100x) — any small correction destroys your deposit.
- ❌ Risking more than 5-10% of deposit per trade — 3-4 losing trades in a row and you’re out of money.
6. 🏦 Where to Trade Futures (Long/Short): Best Exchanges for Beginners
| Exchange | Max leverage | Min deposit | Beginner-friendly features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bybit | 100x | 10 USDT | Best demo account (paper trading), simple interface, Ukrainian support |
| Binance | 125x | 10 USDT | Highest liquidity, many educational materials |
| WhiteBIT | 100x | 10 USDT | Ukrainian exchange, UAH P2P, convenient deposit |
| Bitget | 125x | 10 USDT | Copy trading (copy trades of professional traders) | OKX | 100x | 10 USDT | Powerful demo account, learning center |
Start with a demo account on Bybit or Binance. You’ll receive $10,000-100,000 in virtual funds to practice without risk. Make at least 50-100 demo trades until you achieve consistent profitability. Only then switch to a real account with small amounts ($50-100) and minimal leverage (2x-3x).
7. ❓ Frequently Asked Questions About Long and Short
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Can I open both long and short at the same time? | Yes, this is called hedging. For example, you hold a long on BTC but are afraid of a short-term drop — you open a small short to offset losses. But this is too advanced for beginners. |
| How can I know my liquidation price in advance? | On all exchanges (Bybit, Binance, WhiteBIT), the order entry interface shows a calculator that displays the liquidation price before you confirm the trade. Always check it! |
| Can I trade long/short without leverage? | Yes, but that’s just called “spot trading”. You can buy an asset and sell it higher — that’s a long without leverage. But a short without leverage is impossible because you need to borrow the asset. | What are “bulls” and “bears”? | “Bulls” are traders who bet on rising prices (longs). “Bears” are traders who bet on falling prices (shorts). A bull thrusts its horns upward → price rises. A bear swipes its paw downward → price falls. |
| How much money do I need to start? | Minimum $10-50 USDT. Even with $10, you can open a position with 5x leverage ($50). But remember, with such a small deposit, the risk of losing everything is very high. Recommended starting deposit for learning is $100-200. |
| What is the Funding Rate and why am I charged every 8 hours? | The Funding Rate is a mechanism that keeps the futures price close to the spot price. If most traders are long, they pay those who are short (and vice versa). On most exchanges, this happens every 8 hours. If you hold a position for a long time, these fees can eat your profits. Always check the current rate before opening a position. |
Long and short are not magic — they are tools that require discipline and risk management. 90% of success in trading comes not from market analysis, but from psychology and following rules. Always set a Stop Loss, use no more than 2x-3x leverage, risk no more than 1-2% of your deposit per trade. Start with a demo account, practice, then move to a real account with small amounts. Remember: slow and steady profit is better than a quick loss of all your money. Good luck!