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Margin Calculator

Estimate margin required for stock trades — equity intraday, delivery, futures, and options. Pre-set typical leverage by segment.

⚠️ Not financial advice. Results are illustrative only and should not be used as the basis for any investment, tax, or financial decision. Consult a qualified financial adviser or chartered accountant before acting on any figure shown.

Most brokers offer ~5x leverage on liquid stocks for intraday squareoff.

~5x typical

Estimates only. Actual margin requirements vary by broker, stock liquidity, exchange-set SPAN/Exposure for derivatives, and SEBI peak-margin rules. Always confirm with your broker before placing the order.

What is a margin calculator?

A margin calculator estimates the upfront capital you need to take a position in a given segment — equity intraday (MIS), equity delivery (CNC), futures, or option buying. It also shows the implied leverage so you can see how much exposure your margin gives you.

Understanding leverage by segment

CNC delivery: 1x (full payment). MIS intraday: ~5x post-SEBI peak margin rules. Stock futures: ~6–8x (12–18% margin). Index futures: ~8–12x (8–12% margin). Option buying: not leveraged in the traditional sense — your downside is capped at the premium paid, but probability-weighted return is often poor.

Risk-managing margin trades

Higher leverage means small price moves generate large P&L swings. Rule of thumb: never deploy more than 5% of capital into any single intraday position even with leverage; never write naked options without a defined-risk hedge. Most retail traders blow up on margin precisely because the leverage masks the position size.

SEBI peak margin rules — what changed in 2021

Before September 2021, brokers could offer intraday leverage of 20–30x on equity and up to 40x on some derivative positions. SEBI's peak margin circular reduced equity intraday to ~5x and mandated upfront margin collection for all F&O positions at the exchange-prescribed SPAN + Exposure level. This significantly reduced the leverage available to retail traders. Brokers like Zerodha, Upstox, and Angel One now report peak margin utilization to exchanges four times per day — any shortfall triggers a margin penalty. Always check your broker's current margin framework, not theoretical maximums.

Margin for F&O — SPAN and Exposure explained

SPAN (Standard Portfolio Analysis of Risk) margin is set by NSE/BSE based on the statistical worst-case single-day loss for a position at 99% confidence. Exposure margin is an additional buffer, usually 3–5% of contract value for equity derivatives. Together they form the Total Initial Margin (TIM). For Nifty 50 futures (lot size 25, ~₹24,000 per unit), TIM is approximately ₹95,000–1,10,000 per lot. For Bank Nifty options writing, TIM can be ₹80,000–1,40,000 per lot depending on strike and expiry. Always verify on your broker's margin calculator before placing the order — SPAN changes daily with volatility.

Who uses a margin calculator

Active retail traders on Zerodha, Upstox, and Angel One use it to size positions before entering trades, ensuring they have sufficient balance to avoid margin shortfall penalties. Traders building multi-leg options strategies (iron condors, straddles, spreads) calculate combined margin to understand capital efficiency — spread positions require significantly less margin than naked short options. Beginning traders use it to understand the real capital requirement before switching from CNC delivery to F&O, which often comes as a shock when they realize a single Nifty futures lot requires ₹1 lakh+ in margin versus the impression of "just one lot."

Frequently asked questions

What is margin in stock trading?
Margin is the upfront amount you must deposit with your broker to take a trade. For delivery (CNC) trades you need 100% margin (full payment). For intraday (MIS), brokers give leverage (typically 5x — meaning 20% margin). For futures, exchange-mandated SPAN + Exposure margin (usually 12–20% of contract value).
What does the SEBI peak margin rule mean?
Since September 2021, SEBI requires brokers to collect the full applicable margin upfront — peak intraday leverage w from 20–30x to ~5x for equity intraday, and exchange-mandated levels for derivatives. This w major change and reduced retail intraday leverage significantly.
Why is the option margin different?
Buying options requires only the premium (your maximum loss). Selling/writing options requires SPAN + Exposure margin like futures (often 1–3 lakh per lot for index options) because the seller h unlimited loss exposure. This calculator covers option buying only.
How is futures margin calculated?
Two components: SPAN margin (Standard Portfolio Analysis of Risk — risk-based, varies by stock volatility) + Exposure margin (additional buffer, usually 3–5% of contract value). Combined, total margin is typically 12–20% of the notional contract value. Check your broker's exact requirement before placing the order.
Are these margin estimates accurate?
These are typical numbers — actual margin varies by broker, stock liquidity, your account category (PRO vs retail), and live exchange-set values. Always check your broker's margin calculator for the exact pre-trade margin before placing the order. Use these estimates only for sizing decisions.

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