Open Order: Definition, How They Work, and Risks
Key takeaways
- An open order is an unfilled, working order that remains active until its specified condition is met, it is cancelled, or it expires.
- Open orders are typically conditional (limit or stop orders) and therefore may not execute immediately. Market orders are usually filled instantly and are not “open.”
- Open orders can be useful for entering trades at preferred prices but carry risks if left unattended.
What is an open order?
An open order is a buy or sell order that has not yet been executed and remains active in the market. It will execute only when the conditions set by the trader (for example, a target price) are satisfied. If those conditions are never met, the order stays open until cancelled or it expires according to its time-in-force instructions.
How open orders work
- Conditional nature: Open orders are commonly limit orders or stop orders. The order will execute only when the market reaches the specified price or trigger.
- Execution delay: Because they depend on price conditions, open orders can remain unfilled for long periods, especially for less liquid securities.
- Time-in-force: Traders choose how long an order remains active — for example, a day order (expires at market close) or good-til-canceled (GTC), which remains active until cancelled or it automatically expires per the broker’s policy.
- Market depth: Open orders contribute to visible buy/sell interest at different price levels, helping indicate market depth.
Common types that remain open
- Limit orders — buy or sell at a specified price or better.
- Buy stop / sell stop orders — trigger a market or limit order once a certain price is reached.
(Contrast: market orders have no such conditions and are typically filled immediately.)
Risks of keeping orders open
- Price movement risk: If the market moves against your intended trade while an order is open, you may end up executing at an undesirable time or miss a better opportunity.
- Leverage exposure: Traders using leverage are particularly vulnerable to adverse moves while orders remain open.
- Forgotten orders: Take-profit or stop-loss orders left in place can execute unexpectedly as conditions change, potentially locking in unwanted outcomes.
- Broker policies: Many brokers will automatically cancel GTC orders after a set period (often several months), which can cause assumptions about protection or exposure to be incorrect.
Best practices
- Review open orders regularly — ideally daily — to ensure they still reflect your strategy and market conditions.
- Use day orders if you prefer to avoid overnight or multi-day exposure.
- Adjust take-profit and stop-loss orders as your position or market outlook changes.
- Be aware of your broker’s expiry and cancellation policies for GTC and other order types.
- For active traders, consider closing positions or cancelling open orders at the end of the trading day to avoid unintended overnight risk.
Conclusion
Open orders are a useful tool for executing trades at preferred prices without needing to monitor the market continuously. They offer flexibility but require attention: review and manage them regularly, understand the specific order type and time-in-force you’re using, and be mindful of the risks—especially when using leverage or trading illiquid securities.