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Glossary

What is a Market Order? Definition & When to Use

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

What is a Market Order?

A market order is an instruction to buy or sell a security immediately at the best available current price. Market orders prioritize speed of execution over price—your trade will be filled quickly but at whatever price exists when the order reaches the market.

How Market Orders Work

  1. You submit a market order to buy 100 shares of XYZ
  2. Order is sent to the exchange immediately
  3. Order fills at the current ask price (for buys) or bid price (for sells)
  4. You receive confirmation of execution

Market Order Example

Buy Order:

  • Current bid: $99.50
  • Current ask: $100.00
  • Market buy order fills at ~$100.00

Sell Order:

  • Current bid: $99.50
  • Current ask: $100.00
  • Market sell order fills at ~$99.50

When to Use Market Orders

Good For:

  • Highly liquid stocks: Large companies with tight spreads
  • Urgency: When you need to trade immediately
  • Normal market hours: When spreads are tightest
  • Small orders: Less likely to move the market

Avoid When:

  • Low liquidity stocks: Wide bid-ask spreads
  • Pre-market/after-hours: Spreads widen significantly
  • Volatile markets: Prices changing rapidly
  • Large orders: May not fill at single price

Market Order vs. Limit Order

Factor Market Order Limit Order
Execution Guaranteed (if market open) Not guaranteed
Price Not guaranteed Set by you
Speed Immediate May take time or never fill
Best For Urgency Price control

Bid-Ask Spread Impact

The bid-ask spread is the cost of using market orders:

Stock Type Typical Spread
Large-cap stocks $0.01-0.05
Mid-cap stocks $0.05-0.20
Small-cap stocks $0.20-1.00+
Low volume stocks $1.00+

Example Cost

  • Spread: $0.50
  • Buy 100 shares at market
  • Immediate “loss”: $50 (spread)

Slippage

Slippage occurs when your fill price differs from the expected price:

Cause Result
Fast-moving market Fill at worse price
Large order size Exhausts available shares at best price
Low liquidity Wide spread, poor fills

Example

  • Stock trading at $100
  • You place market order for 10,000 shares
  • Only 1,000 shares available at $100
  • Rest fills at $100.10, $100.20, etc.
  • Average fill: $100.12 (slippage of $0.12)

Market Orders in Different Conditions

Normal Trading Hours (9:30 AM - 4:00 PM ET)

  • Best execution quality
  • Tightest spreads
  • Most liquidity

Pre-Market/After-Hours

  • Wider spreads
  • Lower liquidity
  • Higher slippage risk
  • Consider limit orders instead

During Volatility

  • Prices moving rapidly
  • Spreads widen
  • Significant slippage possible
  • Limit orders often better

Order Types Comparison

Order Type Description
Market Execute immediately at current price
Limit Execute at specified price or better
Stop Becomes market order at trigger price
Stop-Limit Becomes limit order at trigger price

Risks of Market Orders

  1. Price uncertainty: May fill at unexpected price
  2. Flash crashes: Brief extreme prices
  3. Gaps: Large overnight price changes
  4. Thin markets: Poor fills in illiquid stocks

Tips for Using Market Orders

  1. Check the spread before placing order
  2. Use for liquid stocks with tight spreads
  3. Trade during regular hours when possible
  4. Use limit orders for illiquid stocks
  5. Be cautious with size relative to typical volume

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