How does a raw spread account work in trading?
Raw spread accounts charge you a tighter spread and in return, you must pay a fixed amount of money as commission after each trade.
There was a time I traded 0.05 lot size of EUR/USD on a raw account, and the spread was 0.01 pips. Before closing the trade i was up $5 but after closing the trade i discovered my final profit was $4.82 because a $0.18 commission had been deducted.
Raw accounts have lower spread costs so that during trading, you can set your stop loss close to your entry without having to worry about being stopped out easily. Although you also pay a commission per trade, you only pay the commission after you close the trade. The disadvantage of raw accounts for some is that you need to calculate the commission in your head as it is not displayed on the system. So, while you are trading you need to have a mental idea of how much commission you will be charged after the trade is closed and you have to factor that into your take profit. If your profit is lower than the commission, you will discover that a trade that seemed to close in a profit will actually be represented as a loss in your account history after commission is removed.
Raw spread accounts have a benefit of transparency since the commission is the major part of the trading fee, while spread is a minor part.
You see with regular trading accounts, the spread is way higher, can be widened during a trade & is not shown in the history or account statement. But with raw spread accounts, the spread is a minor part of the trading fee instead the commission per trade which is the major part of the trading fee, is displayed in the account history and acount statement.
This way. you can calculate how much fees you pay for each trade. Raw accounts are ideal for high volume traders where even the slightest increase in spread could translate to a tangible sum of money.
In the grand scheme of things there may not be a significant cost saving when it comes to raw/standard accounts but the raw account definitely offers more transparency.
Raw spread accounts arent necessarily better/cheaper than standard accounts but they allow you more wiggle room when it comes to setting your stop loss and making it tight.
What Is a Raw Spread Account?
A raw spread account gives you the actual market spread, often extremely low (sometimes 0.0–0.3 pips).
But instead of widening the spread, the broker charges a fixed commission per trade.
Example
Spread: 0.1 pips
Commission: maybe $3–$7 per lot (varies by broker)
So your cost = tiny spread + commission.
What Is a Standard/Regular Account?
A regular account gives you “all-in” spreads that are usually higher (e.g., 1.0–2.0+ pips) but…
No commissions (or very low ones)
Spread includes the broker’s markup
Your cost = spread only.
Benefits of Raw Spread Accounts.
1. Lower overall cost (in many cases)
Even with commissions, raw spread accounts can be cheaper if you trade frequently or open/close trades quickly.
2. Better for scalpers/day traders
Strategies that rely on:
Tight entries
Fast moves
Small stop-losses
benefit from the lower spreads.
3. More transparent pricing
You can clearly see:
Market spread
Broker commission
Nothing hidden in extra spread markup.
4. More accurate stop-loss and take-profit areas
Smaller spreads = more precise execution, especially around news or volatility spikes
Raw spread accounts are onlyy good for scalping if the commission per side is low. Most brokers charge high commissions form $3 per side or more and it erodes part of your profit. You may be better off with a standard account as a scalper if you dont find a raw account with low commission