Slippage
Slippage is not only volatility. It can come from low liquidity, route depth, market movement, or the size of your own order relative to available liquidity.
What slippage should change in your behavior
Slippage is not a random annoyance setting. It is the damage limit you are willing to accept before the trade stops being acceptable.
It is a damage boundary
Slippage tolerance tells the route how much execution drift you still accept before the trade should fail.
High slippage is not a fix
If you only get execution by stretching tolerance, the route quality or trade size is usually the real problem.
Size often matters more
Reducing size is often cleaner than forcing the same weak route through wider tolerance.
Low vs high slippage in plain English
Users usually do not need a perfect number. They need to understand what kind of failure each direction is buying.
Lower slippage
Better when you want stronger price protection and you are willing to let the route fail if conditions move.
Higher slippage
Defensible only when you know why the route needs extra room and still accept the worse possible fill.
See it in product
These are the three fastest anchors for live use: where the term first appears, what to treat as the warning sign, and which rule should change your next move.
Use the term in context
Work through the main concept first, then move into applied judgment and next actions.
What slippage actually changes
Slippage tolerance is not a setting for getting a better price. It is a setting for how much price movement you are willing to tolerate before the trade should fail.
What actually happened
These are public cases and repeated real-world patterns turned into teachable stories. Use them to see how small shortcuts become expensive outcomes in real product flows.
Stablecoin swap, mempool exposure, six-figure damage
In a widely reported March 2025 sandwich-attack case, a trader tried to swap about $220,764 of USDC for USDT on Uniswap v3. On the surface it looked like the safest kind of trade: stablecoin into stablecoin.
One real-world failure usually teaches faster than ten abstract warnings.
The trade looked too boring to be dangerous, so execution mechanics like MEV exposure and slippage felt less important than they really were.
A large size, a public route, and a swap that still depended on execution timing rather than a guaranteed fixed outcome. In product terms, this is the moment to look harder at route quality and min received instead of relaxing because both tokens look stable.
These are the exact product moments where this kind of mistake usually first looks harmless.
Stable assets do not make execution mechanically safe. Slippage discipline, route quality, and MEV exposure still matter when the trade looks boring.
Treat even stablecoin routes as real execution events. Check route quality, keep slippage disciplined, and avoid assuming 'boring asset pair' means 'safe execution.'
Carry this into live execution
Before you sign or confirm
This section should help in the moment of risk. Keep one question in mind: what should I check right now before giving authority or sending the route forward?
Before raising slippage
Decision flow
Do not use this like a reading section. Use it as the order of operations when the screen is asking for authority or final confirmation.
How to think through it
Start with the route, not the setting
If slippage already feels high, first ask whether the route is thin, volatile, or too large for the available liquidity. Do not start by forcing the setting upward.
Check min received
Min received is where the trade stops being acceptable. If that number already feels bad, the trade is weak before you touch the slippage control.
Adjust size before tolerance
Smaller size often fixes the real problem more cleanly than a wider tolerance. This is especially true when price impact is doing part of the damage.
Only widen when you understand the reason
If you widen slippage, do it because you understand the market condition and still accept the downside, not because the button keeps failing.
Signals to notice
That usually means the trade is unstable right now, and forcing it through can turn a decent idea into a bad fill.
That is a sign the liquidity is more fragile than it first looked.
That often means the route quality is weak or the trade size is wrong for the market.
Decision rules
Common mistakes
Short scenarios
Use quick situations like these to test whether the concept would hold up in a real product flow.
Large order into thin liquidity
Fast market, quote looks stale
Keep building the lesson
Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.
Related paths
Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.