Edge Desk Au

Limit vs Market Order Explained: Beginner Guide for Traders

Orders tell your broker how to buy/sell. Market orders execute fast at current price; limit orders at your price or better. Understanding them builds good habits let’s break it down simply.

What is a Market Order?

Executes immediately at the best available price.

Pros: Quick, guaranteed fill (in normal markets).
Cons: Price can slip in volatile times (e.g., you pay more than expected).
When to use: Liquid stocks like ASX blue-chips, when speed matters over exact price.

Example: Market buy BHP if quoted $40, you get it near $40, but could be $40.05 if market moves.

What is a Limit Order?

Executes only at your specified price or better.

Pros: Control price, avoid surprises.
Cons: May not fill if market doesn’t hit your price.
When to use: Volatile stocks, or when you have a target (e.g., buy below current price).

Example: Limit buy BHP at $39 if price drops to $39 or less, it fills; otherwise, waits.

Key Differences

Speed: Market = instant; Limit = waits for price.
Price control: Market = none; Limit = full.
Risk: Market risks slippage; Limit risks missing the trade.

In 2025, with fast markets, use limit for precision.
When to Choose Each

Market: Quick entry/exit in stable conditions.
Limit: Buying dips or selling rallies.

Pro tip: Combine with stop-loss for protection.

FAQs

Which is better for beginners?

Start with limit to learn control.

Do fees differ?

No, same commission.

What about after-hours?

Limit orders can stay active; market only during open.

Key Takeaways

Market for speed, limit for control practice both in demo.


Join EdgeDeskAU for more order type guides.
Disclaimer: Education only. Orders don’t guarantee profits; markets can gap.

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