Top Gainers (24h)
FuturesCalc
futurescalc.pro • Futures Calculator & Market Cap Tool
TR
Calculator
Trading Guide
What is this app?
Blog
About

🚀 Leverage Calculator

💸 Trade with Lower Fees
Educational tool only. Not financial advice.

Free Futures Calculator for Beginners

FuturesCalc is a free crypto futures calculator built for beginners who want to understand risk before opening a leveraged position. Instead of guessing your profit, liquidation, or stop loss risk, you can estimate the numbers in seconds. We focus on the most common beginner questions: “How big is my position at 10x?”, “How much do I lose if stop hits?”, and “What is an estimated liquidation price?”.

This site also includes a market cap comparison tool for top coins. Many new traders look only at “price”, but price alone is misleading. Market cap (price × circulating supply) helps you compare coins realistically. For education, we also provide a trading guide and beginner-friendly blog posts.

This website is educational. Calculations are estimates and exchanges may differ due to fees, maintenance margin, and rules.

What this calculator does

Use this tool before opening a futures position. It estimates your position size, profit/loss (PnL), the money you risk at your stop loss, and an educational liquidation price estimate. For Cross margin, your account balance can help support the position, so liquidation can differ.

  • Position size = Investment × Leverage
  • PnL changes with entry/exit difference
  • Stop loss shows how much you lose if price hits your stop
  • Liquidation is an estimate (exchanges differ by fees/rules)
Show A with B market cap
Pick from Top 200 and see A price if it had B's market cap (search + caching).
A
=
B

What does “A with B market cap” mean?

This feature answers a simple question: “If coin A reached coin B’s market cap, what would A’s price be?” We estimate it using A’s circulating supply and B’s market cap. It’s useful for beginners to understand that “price” alone doesn’t show size — market cap matters.

  • Market cap = price × circulating supply
  • If supply stays the same, price changes with market cap
  • “How many x?” shows how much A must grow to match B
  • This is educational; supply and market cap can change over time