The hidden cost inside your trades that quietly reduces your edge.

Most traders think they lose money because they’re wrong.

A lot of the time, they’re not.

They’re just getting worse execution than they realise.

A trade can look right on the chart and still cost more than you realise in execution.

Because on the surface, nothing seems wrong.

You click into a trade at one price, and it fills slightly higher or lower. The difference looks small. Almost irrelevant.

Easy to dismiss.

But that small gap happens more often than most traders realise. And over time, it adds up.

Slippage is simply the difference between the price you expected and the price you actually got.

It tends to show up more in fast markets, thinner liquidity, or when larger orders hit the book. But it does not need to be dramatic to matter.

That is what makes it dangerous.

A few tiny execution losses scattered across dozens or hundreds of trades can quietly become a meaningful drag on performance.

And most traders barely notice it happening.

Because slippage does not announce itself.

There is no warning. No red flag. No obvious notification telling you that the trade cost more than expected.

You just get a slightly worse entry. Or a slightly worse exit.

And that is enough.

Now combine that with spreads, fees, and funding if you are trading futures, and the total cost of trading starts to look very different from what most beginners imagine.

Two traders can take the same setup. Same direction. Same idea. Same market.

And still end up with different results.

Not because one read the chart better.

Because one executed the trade better.

That is the part many beginners miss.

Trading is not just about being right.

It is about how efficiently you turn an idea into an actual position.

And slippage is one of the quietest ways that efficiency gets lost.

Once you start noticing it, you cannot really unsee it.

And once you factor it in properly, you start thinking very differently about platforms, liquidity, order types, and even which trades are worth taking at all.

At some point, the question stops being:

“Was this a good trade?”

And becomes:

“Was this executed well?”

Tags:

CryptocurrencyTradingCrypto TradingInvestingFinance

What Is Slippage in Crypto Trading? And Why It Quietly Eats Your Profits was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.

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