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XAUUSD Pip Value Calculator (Gold)
Gold does not follow the forex pip rules. This works out the value of one gold pip per lot in your account currency — and shows both competing pip definitions so you can match your broker.
Gold trade details
Gold pip value
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On a standard gold (XAUUSD) lot of 100 ounces, a pip of 0.01 is worth about $1 and a pip of 0.1 is worth about $10. Brokers disagree on which step they call a “pip”, so the value is pip step × 100 × lots. Gold is priced in US dollars, so on a USD account there is no exchange-rate division.
How it works
Why gold breaks the forex pip rule
A normal forex pip is the fourth decimal place of the price (0.0001), or the second on yen pairs (0.01). Gold quoted as XAUUSD is a price in dollars per ounce — for example 2,950.40 — and there is no industry-wide agreement on which decimal place counts as a “pip.” That single ambiguity is why two traders using the same lot size can quote pip values that differ by a factor of ten.
The two gold pip definitions
- The cent pip (0.01). One pip is a one-cent move in the gold price. On a standard 100-ounce lot that is
0.01 × 100 = $1 per pip. This is the mainstream convention and the default here. - The dime pip (0.10). One pip is a ten-cent move. On the same 100-ounce lot that is
0.10 × 100 = $10 per pip— ten times larger.
Neither is “wrong” — they are different labels for the same price ladder. Always check which one your broker's platform uses before you size a trade. Toggle the gold pip definition above to see your number both ways.
The formula
pip value (USD) = pip step × contract size × lots, where the contract size is 100 troy ounces per standard lot.
Because gold (XAUUSD) is priced in US dollars, the value already comes out in USD. If your account is in USD there is nothing more to do. If your account is in another currency, multiply by the rate that converts USD into your account currency — there is no division by a gold “exchange rate,” because gold is the asset, not a currency pair.
Why you do not divide gold by an exchange rate
A common error copied across calculator sites applies the forex base-currency formula to gold — dividing by the price, as in (0.01 / price) × 100. That treats gold as if it were the base currency of a pair you must convert out of. It is not: XAUUSD is already denominated in dollars, so on a USD account the pip value is simply the pip step times the ounces. Dividing by a price near 2,950 would understate the pip value by roughly three thousand times.
Worked example 1 — one standard lot, cent pip
One standard lot is 100 ounces. With the 0.01 cent pip, one pip is 0.01 × 100 × 1 = $1. A move of $2.50 in the gold price is 250 cent-pips, so on one lot that is $250.
Worked example 2 — the same trade, dime pip
If your broker calls 0.10 one pip, the same lot is 0.10 × 100 × 1 = $10 per pip, and that $2.50 move is 25 pips worth $250 — the money is identical, only the pip count and per-pip value change. That is exactly why the definition matters: a stop “50 pips” away is a $0.50 move under the cent definition but a $5.00 move under the dime definition.
Mini and micro gold lots
A 0.1 lot (10 ounces) is $0.10 per cent-pip; a 0.01 lot (1 ounce) is $0.01 per cent-pip. Multiply by ten if your broker uses the dime definition. Some brokers also offer gold in a 10-ounce mini contract — if yours does, set the contract size to match.
Common mistakes
- Mixing the two pip definitions. Reading a stop in cent-pips but a pip value in dime-pips misstates risk by 10x. Pick one and stay consistent across the whole trade.
- Dividing by the gold price. Gold is dollar-denominated; on a USD account you never divide by the price. That mistake is baked into several online gold calculators.
- Assuming 100,000 units. Gold's standard lot is 100 ounces, not the 100,000 units of a forex lot — using the forex contract size overstates the value a thousand-fold.
Frequently asked questions
How much is one pip of gold (XAUUSD) worth?
Is a gold pip 0.01 or 0.1?
Why is the gold pip value not divided by the price?
pip step × 100 × lots. Dividing by the gold price applies the forex base-currency rule where it does not belong and gives a number thousands of times too small.