What is the difference between market Order and Limit Order?
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Market order and limit order are just two different ways of buying or selling a stock. But the difference is: ✓ speed vs control Let Me Explain With a Simple Story Mama Ngozi goes to the market to buy tomatoes. Scenario 1: Market Order She tells the seller: 👉 “Give me tomatoes NOW at the current priRead more
Market order and limit order are just two different ways of buying or selling a stock.
But the difference is:
✓ speed vs control
Let Me Explain With a Simple Story
Mama Ngozi goes to the market to buy tomatoes.
Scenario 1: Market Order
She tells the seller:
👉 “Give me tomatoes NOW at the current price.”
She doesn’t negotiate.
She just buys immediately.
That is a MARKET ORDER
✓ You buy instantly
✓ at the current market price
Scenario 2: Limit Order
Mama Ngozi says:
👉 “I will only buy if the price drops to ₦500.”
If the seller agrees later…
She buys.
If not…
She walks away.
That is a LIMIT ORDER
✓ You set your price
✓ the trade only happens if price reaches it
Oya… Relax Let Me Explain
1. Market Order (Speed)
When you use market order:
• your order is executed immediately
• price may change slightly
• you don’t control the exact price
Good For
• fast execution
• highly active stocks
Risk
You may buy:
✓ slightly higher
or sell
✓ slightly lower
2. Limit Order (Control)
When you use limit order:
• you choose the price
• trade only happens at your price or better
Good For
• price control
• patient investors
Risk
Your order may:
✓ not execute at all
Let Me Be Honest With You
Many beginners lose money because:
• they rush with market orders
• without checking price
Simple Comparison
Market Order
• Speed → High
• Price control → Low
• Execution → Almost guaranteed
Limit Order
• Speed → Slower
• Price control → High
• Execution → Not guaranteed
When Should You Use Each?
Use Market Order When:
• you want to enter quickly
• the price difference is small
Use Limit Order When:
• you care about price
• you are not in a rush
Final Truth
Market order gives you:
✓ speed
Limit order gives you:
✓ control
Let Me Leave You With This
Before clicking BUY or SELL, ask yourself:
• Do I want speed… or do I want control?
Because once you understand that…
You stop guessing…
And start trading like someone who knows what they are doing.
Rose Ejituru
See lessA market order is an order to buy or sell a security immediately. This type of order guarantees that the order will be executed, but does not guarantee the execution price. A market order generally will execute at or near the current bid price (for a sell order) or ask price (for a buy order). HowevRead more
A market order is an order to buy or sell a security immediately. This type of order guarantees that the order will be executed, but does not guarantee the execution price. A market order generally will execute at or near the current bid price (for a sell order) or ask price (for a buy order). However, it is imperative for investors to remember that the last-traded price is not necessarily the price at which a market order will be executed, whereas…
A limit order is an order to buy or sell a security at a specific price or better (higher). A buy limit order used when buying can only be executed at the limit price or lower, and a sell limit order can only be executed at the limit price or higher (this aids higher returns). Example: An investor wants to purchase shares of ABC stock for no more than 400 naira per share. The investor could submit a limit order for this amount and this order will only execute if the price of ABC stock is 400 naira or lower.
In placing a market order, there is no specific price, the order executes at the current price or near the current price, while in placing a limit order, there is usually a specific price which would be executed once that price is hit.
There is also a stop-order.
A stop order, also referred to as a stop-loss order is an order to sell a stock once the price of the stock reaches the specified price, known as the stop price.
The stop-loss order is used to protect capital and returns when there is a drop in share price.
See lessA market order and a limit order are two basic ways to buy or sell assets (like stocks or crypto), and the key difference is speed vs. price control. Market Order Executes immediately at the best available current price Priority: speed You don’t control the exact price you get Example: If a stock isRead more
A market order and a limit order are two basic ways to buy or sell assets (like stocks or crypto), and the key difference is speed vs. price control.
Market Order
Executes immediately at the best available current price
Priority: speed
You don’t control the exact price you get
Example:
If a stock is trading around $100, a market order will buy it right away—maybe at $100.05 or $99.95 depending on what’s available.
👉 Best when you want to enter or exit quickly and price differences aren’t a big concern.
Limit Order
Executes only at a specific price (or better) that you set
Priority: price control
May not execute at all if the market never reaches your price
Example:
If a stock is at $100 and you place a limit order to buy at $95, the order will only go through if the price drops to $95 or lower.
👉 Best when you care about getting a specific price and are willing to wait.
Simple comparison
Feature
Market Order
Limit Order
Execution
Immediate
Only at set price
Price control
No
Yes
Certainty
High (fills fast)
Uncertain (may not fill)
See less