What is day trading and how risky is it?

It may be exciting, but the odds are long and the risks high

Day trader woman working from home, sitting in front of computers and looking at her phone
Day trading ‘requires intense focus and rapid decision-making, which can be draining’
(Image credit: MoMo Productions / Getty Images)

Day trading is the inverse of the slow and steady approach of buy-and-hold investing. With day trading, you buy and sell investments quickly — in less than a day, hence the name — in the hopes of scoring a profit off of price fluctuations in the market.

This may sound exciting; there is certainly more action involved than the waiting game that is long-term investing. But there is also substantial risk.

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Becca Stanek, The Week US

Becca Stanek has worked as an editor and writer in the personal finance space since 2017. She previously served as a deputy editor and later a managing editor overseeing investing and savings content at LendingTree and as an editor at the financial startup SmartAsset, where she focused on retirement- and financial-adviser-related content. Before that, Becca was a staff writer at The Week, primarily contributing to Speed Reads.