Ever stared at a forex quote and felt completely lost?
You're not alone. Those two numbers side by side — like EUR/USD 1.0850 — can look like gibberish at first.
But here's the thing: forex quotes are actually simple once you know what you're looking at. And once you understand them, everything else in trading starts to click.
Let me break it down for you — the way I wish someone had explained it to me when I started.
What Is a Forex Quote? (The Simple Version)
A forex quote is just the price of one currency expressed in another currency. That's it.
When you see EUR/USD at 1.0850, it means 1 euro costs $1.0850. Simple, right?
Every forex quote has two parts:
- Base currency — the first currency (EUR in EUR/USD)
- Quote currency — the second currency (USD in EUR/USD)
The number tells you how much of the quote currency you need to buy one unit of the base currency.
So EUR/USD = 1.0850 means: "I need $1.0850 to buy €1."
The Two Numbers You Always See: Bid and Ask
Here's where most beginners get confused. A forex quote shows two prices, not one.
You'll see something like this:
EUR/USD: 1.0848 / 1.0850
The first number (1.0848) is the bid price — what the market will pay you if you SELL.
The second number (1.0850) is the ask price — what you pay to BUY.
Think of it like a used car dealership:
- The dealer's bid is what they'll pay you for your car ($5,000)
- The dealer's ask is what they'll sell you a car for ($6,000)
The difference? That's their profit. In forex, we call that difference the spread.
Real Example: How Bid and Ask Affect Your Trade
Let's say you want to buy EUR/USD at 1.0850 with 0.1 lots.
- You enter at the ask price: 1.0850
- Price moves to 1.0860 — great, you're up 10 pips
- But when you close, you sell at the bid price: 1.0858
- Your actual profit? 8 pips, not 10
That 2-pip difference? The spread. It's the cost of doing business.
What Is a Pip? (And Why It Matters for Your Money)
A pip is the smallest price movement in most currency pairs. For most pairs like EUR/USD, that's the fourth decimal place — 0.0001.
So if EUR/USD moves from 1.0850 to 1.0851, that's 1 pip.
But here's where the math gets real:
- On 0.1 lots, 1 pip = $1
- On 1.0 lots, 1 pip = $10
EUR/USD moves about 80-100 pips on an average day. On 0.1 lots, that's $80-$100. On 1.0 lots? $800-$1,000.
See why understanding pips matters for your risk management?
Direct vs Indirect Quotes — What's the Difference?
You might hear traders talk about direct quotes and indirect quotes. Here's the simple difference:
| Quote Type | What It Shows | Example (from US perspective) |
|---|---|---|
| Direct Quote | Domestic currency needed to buy 1 unit of foreign currency | USD/JPY = 150 — $1 buys ¥150 |
| Indirect Quote | Foreign currency needed to buy 1 unit of domestic currency | EUR/USD = 1.0850 — €1 buys $1.0850 |
From a US trader's perspective, USD/JPY is a direct quote (how much yen can $1 buy?). EUR/USD is an indirect quote (how many dollars does €1 cost?).
Most major pairs follow a convention: the stronger or more established currency is usually the base. That's why EUR/USD has the euro as base, and USD/JPY has the dollar as base.
Common Mistakes Beginners Make With Forex Quotes
I've seen these mistakes cost people real money. Let me save you the pain.
Mistake #1: Forgetting the Spread Exists
New traders see EUR/USD at 1.0850 and think they can buy and sell at the same price. Nope. You buy at the ask, sell at the bid. That spread is your cost.
Mistake #2: Confusing Base and Quote Currency
When you buy EUR/USD, you're buying euros and selling dollars. When you sell EUR/USD, you're selling euros and buying dollars. Always know which side you're on.
Mistake #3: Ignoring Pip Value
A 50-pip move on EUR/USD with 0.01 lots is $0.50. With 1.0 lots, it's $500. Know your pip value before you enter a trade — not after.
FAQ
What is a forex quote in simple terms?
A forex quote shows the price of one currency in terms of another. For example, EUR/USD at 1.0850 means 1 euro costs $1.0850.
What's the difference between bid and ask in forex?
The bid is the price you can sell at, and the ask is the price you can buy at. The difference between them is the spread, which is the broker's fee.
How do I calculate pip value?
For most pairs, 1 pip on 0.1 lots = $1. On 1.0 lots, 1 pip = $10. For yen pairs, 1 pip on 0.1 lots = about $0.67.
Is EUR/USD a direct or indirect quote?
From a US perspective, EUR/USD is an indirect quote because it shows how much foreign currency (USD) is needed to buy one unit of domestic currency (EUR). From a European perspective, it's a direct quote.
Quick Recap
- A forex quote has a base currency and a quote currency
- You buy at the ask price, sell at the bid price
- The spread is the cost of the trade
- A pip is the smallest price movement — worth $1 on 0.1 lots for most pairs
- Direct quotes show domestic currency per foreign unit; indirect quotes flip it
Quick Win: Practice Reading Quotes Right Now
Open your trading platform or any forex website. Find EUR/USD. Look at the bid and ask prices. Calculate the spread. Then check USD/JPY. Notice how the quote structure is different?
Do this for 5 minutes. I promise — next time you see a forex quote, it'll make sense.







