How to Keep a Crypto Trading Journal (Template + Calculator)
A trading journal is the single most underrated tool for improving performance. Learn what to track, how to calculate key metrics, and how to turn data into better trades.
- A trading journal tracks every trade's details, context, and outcome to identify what's working and what isn't.
- Key metrics to calculate: win rate, risk:reward ratio, expectancy, and profit factor.
- The best journal is one you'll actually use—automate as much as possible with tools like Thrive.fi.
P&L Calculator
Use this calculator to quickly determine your profit or loss on any trade:
Why Keep a Trading Journal?
A trading journal is a systematic record of your trades that reveals patterns you can't see in the moment.It transforms trading from gambling into a data-driven skill you can actually improve.
Here's what journaling does for your trading:
- Identifies winning strategies: You'll discover which setups have the highest win rate and expectancy.
- Exposes emotional leaks: Patterns like "I lose money when I trade angry" become obvious in the data.
- Provides accountability: Writing down your plan before a trade forces discipline.
- Tracks progress: You can see improvement (or decline) over weeks and months.
- Enables coaching: A coach (or AI) can analyze your journal to give specific advice.
Most traders who fail never journaled. Most traders who succeed do. The correlation isn't coincidence—it's causation. Journaling forces the reflection and analysis that separates professionals from amateurs.
Win Rate & Expectancy Calculator
Enter your trading stats to calculate win rate, risk:reward, expectancy, and profit factor:
Win Rate
70.0%
Risk:Reward
1:2.50
Expectancy
$145.00
Profit Factor
5.83
What this means: Your strategy is profitable. On average, you make $145.00 per trade. With 10 trades, your expected profit is $1450.00.
What to Track in Your Trading Journal
The minimum viable journal tracks: date, asset, side, entry, exit, size, and P&L. But the traders who improve fastest track much more. Here's a complete field list:
Essential Fields (Track Every Trade)
- Date and time: When you opened and closed the position
- Asset: What you traded (BTC, ETH, SOL, etc.)
- Side: Long or short
- Entry price: Your average fill price
- Exit price: Your average close price
- Position size: How much you traded
- P&L: Profit or loss in dollars and percentage
Context Fields (Highly Recommended)
- Strategy: What setup triggered the trade (breakout, support bounce, etc.)
- Emotional state: How you felt before and during the trade (confident, anxious, FOMO, etc.)
- Market conditions: Was the market trending or ranging? High or low volatility?
- Trade plan: Your target and stop loss before entering
- Followed plan? Did you stick to your plan or deviate?
Review Fields (Add After Trade Closes)
- What went right: Even losing trades have something you did well
- What went wrong: Even winning trades have mistakes to learn from
- Lessons learned: One specific takeaway for future trades
- Screenshot: Chart at entry and exit for visual review
Example Trade Entry
Here's what a complete trade entry looks like in Thrive:
This is how Thrive helps you track every trade with context
Great execution on this breakout trade. Your entry timing was solid—waiting for volume confirmation reduced risk. The "confident" emotion tag correlates with your best trades. Consider using a trailing stop on breakouts to capture more upside.
Understanding Your Key Metrics
Raw P&L tells you if you're making money. These metrics tell you why.
Win Rate
Win rate is the percentage of trades that were profitable. Formula: (Wins / Total Trades) × 100.
Important: Win rate alone doesn't determine profitability. A 40% win rate is highly profitable if your winners are 3x bigger than your losers. A 70% win rate loses money if your losers are 3x bigger than your winners. Always consider win rate alongside risk:reward.
Risk:Reward Ratio
Risk:reward compares your average win to your average loss. Formula: Average Win / Average Loss.
A 1:2 risk:reward means you make $2 for every $1 you risk. Combined with a 40% win rate, this is profitable: (0.40 × $2) - (0.60 × $1) = $0.20 expected profit per dollar risked.
Expectancy
Expectancy is the average amount you expect to make per trade. Formula:(Win Rate × Avg Win) - (Loss Rate × Avg Loss).
Positive expectancy means your strategy is profitable over time. This is the single most important metric—if your expectancy is negative, you will lose money no matter how good individual trades feel.
Profit Factor
Profit factor is total gross profit divided by total gross loss. Formula:Gross Profit / Gross Loss.
A profit factor above 1.0 means you're profitable. Above 1.5 is good. Above 2.0 is excellent. Below 1.0 means you're losing money. Profit factor is useful because it accounts for both win rate and risk:reward in a single number.
Journaling Methods Compared
Choose the method that matches your needs:
| Spreadsheet | Notion/Notes | Dedicated App (Thrive) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Setup time | 1-2 hours | 30 minutes | 2 minutes |
| Auto P&L calculation | Manual formulas | No | Yes |
| Performance analytics | Build yourself | No | Built-in |
| Emotion tagging | Manual | Manual | One-click |
| AI trade review | No | No | Yes (weekly) |
| Mobile access | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| Cost | Free | Free | $29/mo |
| Best for | Power users | Casual traders | Serious improvement |
How to Review Your Journal
Journaling is only valuable if you review it. Here's a review schedule that maximizes improvement:
After Every Trade (2 minutes)
- Log the trade while details are fresh
- Write one sentence about what went right
- Write one sentence about what went wrong
- Rate your execution 1-10
Weekly Review (30 minutes)
- Calculate this week's metrics: win rate, expectancy, profit factor
- Identify your best and worst trades—what made them different?
- Look for emotional patterns: did anxiety trades perform differently than confident ones?
- Set one specific goal for next week
Monthly Deep Dive (1 hour)
- Calculate monthly metrics and compare to previous months
- Which strategies performed best? Which should you stop using?
- What market conditions suit your style? Which should you avoid?
- Are you improving? If not, what needs to change?
Common Journaling Mistakes
- Not journaling losing trades: Losses teach more than wins. Log everything.
- Skipping the "why": P&L alone doesn't help you improve. Context matters.
- Inconsistent logging: Gaps in data make patterns invisible. Journal every trade.
- Never reviewing: A journal you don't read is just a log. Schedule reviews.
- Focusing only on P&L: Process matters more than outcomes. A good trade can lose money.
- Making it too complex: Start simple. Add fields only when you'll actually use them.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a trading journal?
A trading journal is a record of all your trades including entry/exit prices, position size, strategy used, emotional state, and outcome. It helps you identify patterns in your trading behavior, track performance over time, and make data-driven improvements to your strategy.
Why should I keep a trading journal?
Keeping a trading journal helps you: (1) identify which strategies work best for you, (2) spot emotional patterns that hurt performance, (3) calculate accurate win rate and expectancy, (4) track progress over time, and (5) learn from both winning and losing trades. Most professional traders consider journaling essential.
What should I include in my trading journal?
Essential fields: date/time, asset, side (long/short), entry price, exit price, position size, P&L. Recommended additions: strategy used, emotional state before/during trade, market conditions, screenshot of chart, what went right/wrong, and lessons learned.
How do I calculate my win rate?
Win rate = (Number of winning trades / Total trades) × 100. For example, if you had 7 winners out of 10 trades, your win rate is 70%. Note: win rate alone does not determine profitability—you also need to consider your risk:reward ratio.
What is trading expectancy and how do I calculate it?
Expectancy is the average amount you expect to make (or lose) per trade. Formula: (Win Rate × Average Win) - (Loss Rate × Average Loss). Positive expectancy means your strategy is profitable over time. For example: (0.60 × $200) - (0.40 × $100) = $80 expected profit per trade.
How often should I review my trading journal?
Review individual trades immediately after closing. Do a weekly review to spot patterns and calculate metrics. Do a monthly deep-dive to assess strategy performance and make adjustments. The more frequently you review, the faster you will improve.
Should I use a spreadsheet or app for my trading journal?
Both work, but apps like Thrive.fi offer advantages: automatic P&L calculation, emotion tagging, performance analytics, and AI-powered weekly reviews. Spreadsheets require more manual work but offer unlimited customization. Start with whatever you will actually use consistently.
What is a good win rate for crypto trading?
Win rate alone is misleading. A 40% win rate can be highly profitable if your winners are 3x larger than your losers. Most successful traders have win rates between 40-60% combined with risk:reward ratios of 1:1.5 or better. Focus on expectancy rather than win rate alone.