Academy glossaryDecision concept

Price impact

Price impact measures what your order does to the pool or route itself. It should be distinguished from general market movement because it is caused by your own trade size.

This term should change
If price impact changes the economics of the trade, reduce size before you change settings.
Price impact rising faster than the headline quote suggests.
large trade against small pool
How to use this lesson
Use the lesson summary first, then move straight into the decision split that changes the real tradeoff.
Treat every example below as product context for the same judgment, not as separate glossary trivia.
Keep the later applied and rule sections as support layers, not the main event.
Lesson summary

Price impact means the route is reacting to you

This is one of the most useful concepts in Academy because it stops users from blaming the market for a problem their own size created.

01

It is self-inflicted

Price impact happens because your own trade is large enough to push the route against you.

02

Size is usually the first fix

If price impact climbs fast, smaller size usually improves the route more cleanly than changing settings.

03

A calm chart can still give a bad fill

Stable market action does not protect you if your order is too large for the liquidity available.

Decision point

Volatility vs price impact in plain English

Users often mix these up. Separate them by asking whether the route got worse because the market moved or because your own order stressed the liquidity.

Market volatility

The route worsens because price conditions are moving around you.

Can affect small and large trades alike.
Usually changes over time even before you size up.
Is about external conditions, not only your own footprint.

Price impact

The route worsens because your own trade is heavy relative to the liquidity supporting it.

Usually gets worse as you increase size.
Can appear even when the chart itself looks calm.
Often needs smaller size or a different route, not just more tolerance.

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.

Spot first
large trade against small pool
Watch for
Price impact rising faster than the headline quote suggests.
Rule
If price impact changes the economics of the trade, reduce size before you change settings.
Core lesson

Use the term in context

Work through the main concept first, then move into applied judgment and next actions.

What price impact really is

Price impact is the market moving because of you. That makes it different from slippage caused by volatility or route delay.

If your trade is large relative to liquidity, your own order pushes the price against you.
Price impact can get worse quickly once size crosses the comfortable depth of a pool.
A route can look fine for a small test size and become bad as soon as you scale up.
Users often misread this as random market movement when it is actually self-inflicted execution damage.
Price impact is a sizing problem before it is a settings problem.

How to react when price impact climbs

The right response is usually not to force the trade through. It is to change the shape of the trade.

Reduce size first and see if route quality normalizes.
Compare alternative routes or split execution if the edge survives.
Read price impact together with fees because both eat the same outcome.
If the edge disappears after size, the market is telling you something useful.
A trade that only works at a bad size is usually a bad trade in its current form.
Core points

Carry this into live execution

It is caused by your own trade, not only by volatility.
It changes route quality as size increases.
It is one of the strongest reasons a route can degrade as execution scales.
It helps explain why larger orders need more caution even in apparently healthy pools.
Use after the lesson

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?

Check now
Do not think in abstract principles here. Think in checks you can do on this screen before moving forward.
Do now
Treat order size as part of the execution decision, not an afterthought.
Check whether splitting the trade gives a better net outcome.
Compare price impact with fee drag before you call the route acceptable.
Do not continue if
Do not assume calm charts mean low execution impact.
Do not size up just because the first route preview looks clean.
Do not confuse market movement with self-inflicted slippage.
Red flag if this feels routine
If this step feels like harmless friction, that is already the red flag.
1
Price impact rising faster than the headline quote suggests.
2
Trades that still look okay until size crosses a fragile liquidity threshold.
3
Users blaming volatility for a problem their own order created.
Before first serious use
If these checks are not clear yet, you are not in a good position to rely on speed or instinct.

Before you accept high price impact

1
Check whether a smaller size keeps the trade thesis intact.
2
Compare fee drag and price impact together instead of in isolation.
3
Look at whether one pool is carrying too much of the execution burden.
4
Decide whether waiting or splitting the order gives a cleaner outcome.
Use after the lesson

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

1
Step 1

Ask whether the order is too large for the route

When price impact rises, start with size. The trade itself may simply be too big for the liquidity that is actually available right now.

2
Step 2

Separate your own impact from market movement

If the chart looks calm but the route worsens as size increases, the problem is usually your own execution footprint, not external volatility.

3
Step 3

Change trade shape before changing risk tolerance

Reduce size, split execution, or reconsider timing before you start widening slippage and hoping for a cleaner result.

Signals to notice

1
A slightly larger size causes a sharp drop in output

That usually means you crossed the part of the pool where your own trade starts moving the market too much.

2
Fees look manageable but net outcome still collapses

Price impact may be the real reason the route is degrading, not the visible fee stack.

3
One venue is doing most of the work

That makes the route more fragile if your order size starts pushing into concentrated liquidity.

Rules

Decision rules

If price impact changes the economics of the trade, reduce size before you change settings.
If the route only looks good at tiny size, do not assume it scales cleanly.
If one pool carries most of the route, treat the quote as less resilient than it first appears.
If output edge disappears after price impact, the trade thesis is weaker than the top-line quote suggests.
Avoidable errors

Common mistakes

Blaming volatility for a problem created by your own order size.
Looking only at fees while ignoring the larger damage from price impact.
Testing a small quote and assuming the same route quality holds at full size.
Using higher slippage to mask a sizing problem.
Practice

Short scenarios

Use quick situations like these to test whether the concept would hold up in a real product flow.

Route looks great until size increases

A quote is attractive for a small amount, but output falls sharply when you enter the full intended size.
That is usually price impact, not random bad luck. Reduce size, compare routes again, and decide whether the trade still makes sense at realistic execution size.

Calm market, bad fill

The token chart looks stable, but the route still shows a weak result once your order is large enough.
Calm price action does not protect you from moving the pool yourself. Treat the problem as liquidity depth and order sizing, not as a chart-reading issue.
Continue learning

Keep going from here

Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.

    Price impact | ZeroLyx Academy Glossary