Yudi · Crypto risk, in plain words Learn not to lose first Independent · Not investment advice
YudiYUDI · keep some room

Tool · Self-check

Risk tolerance quiz

Four questions to see which risk profile you're closest to, and roughly what share of your spare, investable money makes sense to start with. It measures your tolerance — it doesn't predict the market and it won't decide for you.

01

How much crypto experience do you have?

02

The money you'd invest — what kind of money is it?

03

In the short term, how big a drop could you sit through?

04

Which goal is closest to yours?

Answered 0 / 4

Some questions are still blank — answer all four first.

Your risk profile


Suggested range (of your spare, investable money)

Where it sits in your spare money
0%50%100%

    This quiz looks at your risk tolerance and temperament — it doesn't predict the market, guarantee any result, or count as investment advice. Every percentage is an illustrative range against your spare, investable money, not a number to copy. It runs entirely in your browser and saves none of your choices.

    How the result is worked out

    Each of the four questions scores 0–3; the total lands you in one of three bands — the lower the score the more cautious, the higher the more you can stomach volatility. One hard rule overrides every score, though: if you pick "money I can't lose," the answer is "don't invest it," whatever else you chose. Tolerance is about whether you can survive the loss, not whether you want the gain.

    Don't get the order backwards

    High tolerance doesn't mean go big. It only sets how high the ceiling can sit; how much each individual trade buys still comes back to position sizing — set the max loss per trade first, then work back. Use both together.

    Honestly

    No band is the "right" answer, and no profile is more advanced than another. This is just a mirror to help you see yourself — it collects nothing, uploads nothing, judges nothing. Crypto is extremely volatile and you can lose your whole stake; whether and how much you invest is your call and your responsibility.

    Clear it's spare money, set a ceiling, then open an account

    If you've confirmed this is money you can afford to lose, the next step is a liquid account that lets you place stops. Signing up with a referral code gets a fee discount — but read the risk pieces first, don't rush in.