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Glossary

What is a Limit Order? Definition, Examples & Strategy

Learn what a limit order is, how limit orders work, when to use buy and sell limit orders, and how they differ from market orders.

What is a Limit Order?

A limit order is an instruction to buy or sell a security at a specific price or better. Unlike market orders that execute immediately at current prices, limit orders only execute when the market reaches your specified price, giving you control over execution price.

How Limit Orders Work

Buy Limit Order

  • Sets the maximum price you’re willing to pay
  • Executes at limit price or lower
  • Placed below current market price

Sell Limit Order

  • Sets the minimum price you’re willing to accept
  • Executes at limit price or higher
  • Placed above current market price

Limit Order Examples

Buy Limit Example

  • Current price: $100
  • You set buy limit at: $95
  • Order fills when price drops to $95 or below

Sell Limit Example

  • Current price: $100
  • You set sell limit at: $105
  • Order fills when price rises to $105 or above

Market Order vs. Limit Order

Factor Market Order Limit Order
Execution Guaranteed* Not guaranteed
Price Not guaranteed You choose
Fill Speed Immediate May take time
Best For Urgency Price control
Risk Price slippage Missed opportunity

*If market is open and stock is trading

Types of Limit Orders

Time-in-Force Options

Type Duration
Day Order Expires at market close
GTC (Good Till Cancelled) Remains until filled or cancelled (usually 30-90 days)
IOC (Immediate or Cancel) Fill immediately or cancel entire order
FOK (Fill or Kill) Fill entire order immediately or cancel all

When to Use Limit Orders

Good For:

  • Setting entry points: Buy stocks at desired prices
  • Taking profits: Sell when targets are reached
  • Illiquid stocks: Avoid wide spreads
  • Volatile markets: Control execution prices
  • Large orders: Prevent moving the market

Less Ideal When:

  • Urgency required: Need to trade now
  • Fast-moving stocks: May miss opportunity
  • Very tight spreads: Minimal benefit over market orders

Limit Order Strategy Examples

Buying on Dips

  • Stock at $100, you want to buy cheaper
  • Set buy limit at $95
  • If stock drops to $95, you automatically buy

Taking Profit

  • Bought stock at $50
  • Set sell limit at $75 (50% profit target)
  • If stock reaches $75, automatically sells

Bracket Orders

Combine limit orders:

  • Buy at $100 (current price via market)
  • Sell limit at $120 (profit target)
  • Sell stop at $90 (loss limit)

Partial Fills

Limit orders may fill partially:

Scenario Result
Order: Buy 1,000 shares at $50
Available: 400 shares at $50 400 shares fill
Remaining: 600 shares Waits for more availability

You may have open positions with unfilled portions.

Limit Order Risks

1. No Execution

If price never reaches your limit, order never fills.

2. Partial Execution

May only get some of your shares.

3. Missed Opportunities

Stock may rally without you if limit is too low.

4. Price Gaps

Stock may gap past your limit (especially good for sells, bad for buys).

Bid-Ask Spread and Limit Orders

Using limit orders to minimize spread costs:

Order Type Execution
Market buy Pays the ask (higher)
Limit buy at bid May fill at bid (lower)

Potential saving = spread × shares

Advanced Limit Order Types

Limit-on-Open

Executes at open if price is at or better than limit.

Limit-on-Close

Executes at close if price is at or better than limit.

Pegged Orders

Automatically adjusts with market (bid/ask peg).

Tips for Using Limit Orders

  1. Research support/resistance levels for strategic placement
  2. Don’t set limits too far from current prices
  3. Monitor GTC orders - market conditions change
  4. Consider spreads when setting limits
  5. Use for entries rather than urgent exits

This glossary entry is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.