What is slippage and how does it work?

If you’ve ever clicked “buy” or “sell” and wondered why the final price wasn’t exactly what you saw on the screen, congratulations, you’ve met slippage.
 
It’s one of those trading concepts everyone experiences but few bother to explain clearly. Yet slippage sits at the heart of how markets function, from stocks and commodities to Bitcoin (BTC) and the most obscure tokens.
 

Slippage, simply explained

At its core, slippage is the difference between the expected price of a trade and the actual price you get when it executes. The price you see on your screen isn’t a guaranteed offer, it’s simply the most recent trade or a midpoint between current bids and asks.
 
By the time your order reaches the market, conditions may have already changed. Orders get updated or canceled, liquidity shifts, and automated systems react in milliseconds. Slippage is the result of this movement.
 
You might plan to buy Bitcoin at $70,000, hit the confirm button, and suddenly the trade completes at $70,050. That $50 difference? Slippage.
 
It happens in traditional markets (stocks, forex, futures), and it’s even more noticeable in digital asset markets, where prices move quickly and liquidity varies widely.
 
In simple terms, slippage is the cost of trading in a constantly changing environment. It affects everyone, from someone making a small crypto trade on their phone to large firms moving significant volume through traditional markets.
 

Positive vs. negative Slippage: Yes, it can work in your favor

Slippage isn’t always bad. There are two kinds:
 
• Negative slippage
You get a worse price than expected. You aimed for $1; the order fills at $1.03.
 
• Positive slippage
You get a better price than expected. You planned to buy at $1; it executes at $0.98.
 
Positive slippage is less common as markets tend to move against you at the worst possible times, but it does happen, especially in calm, liquid environments.
 

Why slippage happens (Hint: Markets don’t wait for you)

Slippage is not a glitch. It’s a natural outcome of how markets match buyers and sellers. Several forces drive it:
  1. Market volatility
Prices can shift in milliseconds. If you’re trading during news events, major announcements, or general chaos, the price you saw a second ago may not exist anymore.
  1. Low liquidity
If an asset doesn’t have enough buy or sell orders waiting, your trade may have to “eat through” multiple price levels to fill your entire order.
This is common in many altcoins or thinly traded assets.
  1. Large order sizes
Big orders can move the market, intentionally or not.
If your order is larger than the available liquidity at your target price, the rest will fill at higher (or lower) prices.
  1. Market order mechanics
Market orders prioritize speed over price. You’re basically telling the exchange, “Fill my order immediately at whatever price is available.”
So… it does exactly that.
 

How slippage looks in practice in crypto markets

You place a market order to buy 2 ETH at $4,000.
 
But volatility hits, and the price jumps to $4,020 as the order executes.
 
Your final fill price is higher than expected.
 
That’s negative slippage, and yes, it feels worse when it’s ETH.
 

How can you reduce slippage?

Good news: slippage can be managed. You don’t have to accept it as trading fate.
  1. Use limit orders
A limit order sets the maximum price you’re willing to buy or minimum price you’re willing to sell. Your trade will only execute at that price or better.
 
Downside? You might not get filled at all.
  1. Avoid volatile moments
That includes:
  • Major economic announcements
  • Fed speeches
  • CPI releases
  • Major crypto news events
  • Random Elon or Trump tweets
  1. Stick to high-liquidity assets when possible
BTC and ETH are generally safer than low-cap tokens with inconsistent order books.
  1. Trade when markets are active
More participants = more liquidity = less slippage.
 
For U.S. assets, that’s usually during U.S. and European trading hours.
 
For crypto, weekends are still slippage traps.
  1. Use platforms with deep liquidity pools
In decentralized finance (DeFi), automated market makers (AMMs) rely on liquidity pools. Larger pools usually mean lower slippage.
 
Some interfaces even show you the estimated slippage before you execute. If that number looks painful, you can walk away.
 

So, is slippage just part of the game?

Pretty much. Slippage isn’t an error in the system; it’s a natural part of how markets work. It’s the cost of getting a trade filled quickly and the result of prices moving before your order goes through.
 
Skilled traders don’t try to remove slippage entirely; they learn how to measure it, manage it, and reduce it when possible.
 
Once you grasp how slippage works, you’re less likely to be surprised by it, and more likely to trade with intention instead of panic-clicking your way into avoidable losses.
 
Call it a market reality check, one every trader eventually needs.
 
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