Where to Find Your Binance Futures Liquidation History?
Want to See How Much You Actually Lost?
After getting liquidated on futures, the first reaction — beyond heartbreak — is usually: how much did I actually lose? At what price was I liquidated? Where do I find that record? Don't worry — Binance saves all your liquidation records; most people just don't know where to look.
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How to Check Liquidation Records on the App
Here's how to view your forced liquidation history on the Binance App:
- Open the Binance App and go to the "Futures" trading page.
- Tap the three-line menu icon in the upper right corner (or find the "Orders" entry).
- Select "Order History" or "Trade History."
- In the filter options, switch the type to "Liquidation Order" or "Forced Liquidation."
- You'll see all your forced liquidation records, including execution price, quantity, time, and other details.
If there are too many records to find a specific one, use the time range filter — for example, select the past week or a custom date range.
How to Check on the Web?
If you prefer using a computer, the web interface is even more convenient:
- Log in to the Binance website and go to the futures trading page.
- Click the "Order History" tab at the bottom of the page.
- Select the "Liquidation Orders" category.
- Filter by contract type (USDT Perpetual, Coin-Margined, etc.) and time range.
The web version displays more information on a single screen, making it better suited for detailed post-trade analysis.
What Specific Information Can You See?
Each liquidation record typically includes:
- Contract name: e.g., BTCUSDT, ETHUSDT
- Direction: Long or short
- Liquidation trigger time: Precise to the second
- Execution price: The actual price at which the system closed your position
- Quantity: The size of the liquidated position
- Realized P&L: The final loss on that position
One thing to note: the execution price may not exactly match the mark price shown for the liquidation. The system executes liquidations via market orders, so during volatile conditions, the actual execution price may differ somewhat from the mark price.
Export Records for Post-Trade Review
If you want to export your liquidation records for systematic analysis, Binance supports that too. On the web's order history page, there's usually an "Export" button in the upper right corner that lets you download records as a CSV file. With this data, you can use Excel or other tools to analyze your trading patterns and identify recurring causes of liquidation.
What's the Point of Reviewing These Records?
Looking at liquidation records isn't about adding salt to the wound — it's about figuring out a few things:
- What time of day did each liquidation happen? Was it always during the early morning hours or around major news releases?
- What leverage were you using? Was it too high?
- Were the loss amounts and position sizes reasonable? Were you going all-in on a single trade?
Answering these questions honestly is the only way to avoid making the same mistakes. Getting liquidated isn't scary — what's scary is not knowing why it happened.