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Netting vs hedging account types on MT5

The single biggest architectural difference in MT5. Why a hedging account behaves like MT4 and a netting account does not, what each lets you do, and which one your broker probably gave you.

PUBLISHED 2026-05-23 READING TIME 7 MIN MT5 BUILD 5830 CATEGORY PLATFORM
Key points:
  • MT5 supports two completely different position accounting models: Netting and Hedging.
  • Hedging is the MT4 default and what most retail forex traders expect.
  • Netting is required for stock and futures accounts under most regulations.
  • Your broker decides the account type when they create your account. You cannot change it later - you would open a new account.

1. What netting and hedging actually mean

The terms describe how MT5 tracks open positions in the same symbol.

Netting

You can hold only one position per symbol. If you buy 1 lot of EURUSD, then later buy 0.5 lot more, you have one position of 1.5 lots at a weighted average entry price. If you then sell 0.7 lot, you have one position of 0.8 lots at the original average price. Selling more than you hold flips you to short.

Hedging

You can hold multiple independent positions per symbol, in opposite directions. You can be long 1 lot EURUSD and short 0.5 lot EURUSD simultaneously, with separate entry prices, SL/TP levels, and tickets. They are tracked as separate trades and close independently.

2. Why this matters

Hedging accounts let you:

  • Open opposing positions in the same symbol (the "hedge" itself)
  • Run multiple strategies on the same instrument without interference
  • Use grid trading EAs that depend on layered positions
  • Treat each entry as an independent trade with its own management

Netting accounts force you to:

  • Think of each symbol as one net exposure
  • Use SL/TP at the position level, not per-trade
  • Forget grid EAs that assume hedging mechanics
  • Match how stock and futures accounts traditionally work

3. Where each model comes from

Hedging: the MT4 inheritance

MT4 only had hedging. When a trader bought EURUSD twice, they got two positions. This is what 99 percent of retail forex traders are used to.

When MT5 launched, hedging was not initially supported. After significant pushback from brokers and traders, MetaQuotes added hedging as an account-type option in 2016. Most retail forex brokers default new accounts to hedging mode to feel familiar to MT4 migrants.

Netting: stock and futures heritage

Real stock and futures exchanges only know netting. You cannot be "long 100 shares and short 50 shares" of Apple at the same time. You are long 50 shares, net. This is how every regulated equity broker tracks positions.

When MT5 was extended into stock and futures (the multi-asset push from 2010 onwards), netting was required. Brokers offering stock CFDs or actual futures generally use netting accounts.

4. How to tell which you have

Three ways:

  1. Try to hedge. Buy 0.01 lot of EURUSD, then sell 0.01 lot. If you end up with two open positions (one long, one short), you are on hedging. If you end up with zero positions (the second closed the first), you are on netting.
  2. Check account properties. In MT5, Tools > Options or right-click account in Navigator, look for Account Type. It says Netting or Hedging.
  3. Read the account email from your broker. Most brokers state the type explicitly when creating the account.

5. Per-position vs per-trade in hedging

On hedging accounts, MT5 distinguishes Position from Deal:

  • Deal: an individual buy or sell transaction. Has a ticket number, fills at one price, has commissions and swap.
  • Position: an open exposure. Each open trade is its own position. Closing a position closes it entirely; partial closes split the position into two with separate tickets.

The History tab shows deals (every transaction). The Trade tab shows positions (currently open exposures). For reporting, both views matter: deals give you the audit trail, positions give you the current state.

6. On netting accounts: weighted average pricing

This catches out hedging traders coming to netting accounts. When you add to a position, the entry price displayed updates to the volume-weighted average.

Example:

  1. Buy 1 lot EURUSD at 1.0800. Position: long 1 lot at 1.0800.
  2. Buy another 1 lot at 1.0850. Position: long 2 lots at 1.0825 (weighted average).
  3. Sell 0.5 lot at 1.0900. Position closes 0.5 lot of the average, leaving long 1.5 lots at 1.0825.

Your P/L on remaining position is calculated against the average. The 0.5 lot you sold realises P/L of (1.0900 - 1.0825) per lot.

7. Strategy implications

Grid strategies

Classical grid strategies depend on layered positions at progressive price levels. They require hedging. On a netting account, the layers collapse into one weighted-average position and the strategy logic breaks.

Hedging strategies (the actual hedge)

If your strategy involves opening an offsetting position to protect an existing trade (without closing the original), you need a hedging account. On netting, the offset just closes part of your position.

Scalping multiple positions per symbol

If you want to scalp the same symbol with multiple independent entries (one targeting 5 pips, one targeting 20 pips), hedging gives you separate positions with separate management. Netting forces you to manage them as one weighted exposure.

Pure directional trading

If your strategy is one-position-per-symbol with full SL/TP discipline, either account type works. Netting is arguably cleaner because there is one number per symbol.

8. The MT4 migration trap

Traders migrating from MT4 sometimes get a netting MT5 account from their broker (especially if the broker categorises the trader as institutional or set the account up for stocks). Their MT4 EA gets ported to MT5, deployed, and immediately misbehaves.

Symptoms:

  • EA reports "open position" but no second trade appears
  • SL and TP work strangely because they apply to the net position
  • Grid strategies degenerate to a single position

Fix: check your account type before deploying. If you need hedging, contact your broker to open a hedging-mode account. They cannot convert your existing account; they will open a new one.

9. Regulatory differences

Some jurisdictions restrict hedging:

  • US (NFA / FIFO rule): US-regulated forex brokers must enforce First-In, First-Out closing. This effectively prevents hedging. Most US brokers offer netting accounts only.
  • EU (ESMA): no prohibition. Both account types are widely available.
  • UK (FCA): no prohibition. Both available.
  • Australia (ASIC): no prohibition. Both available.

If you are a US resident trading with a US-regulated broker, expect netting.

FAQ

Can I switch my MT5 account from netting to hedging?

No. The account type is set at creation and is immutable. To switch, you open a new account with the broker, request the other type, and transfer funds.

Does hedging cost more in margin?

On most brokers, opposing positions in the same symbol receive a margin offset, often 50 percent or full. So hedging 1 lot long and 1 lot short EURUSD does not cost double margin. Specific margin treatment varies by broker - check the contract specification or ask support.

Is one safer than the other?

Neither is inherently safer. Hedging gives you more flexibility, which can be used wisely or to dig deeper holes. Netting forces simpler accounting, which can be a guardrail or a constraint. The risk is in your trading, not the account model.

Do EAs work on both account types?

Well-written modern EAs detect the account type at startup and adapt. Older EAs (especially MT4 ports) often assume hedging and break on netting. Test thoroughly on demo before going live.