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Beginner · Learning Resource

What Is an Order Book?

Open any exchange's trading screen and you'll see a wall of green and red numbers updating in real time. That's the order book — the live list of who wants to buy and sell. Once you can read it, exchange screens stop looking intimidating.

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The 20-second version

An order book is a live list of buy orders (bids) and sell orders (asks) for a coin. The gap between the highest bid and lowest ask is the spread. A deep book with lots of orders usually means better, steadier pricing.

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Bids, asks and the spread

  • Bids — the prices buyers are willing to pay, usually shown in green.
  • Asks (or offers) — the prices sellers are willing to accept, usually shown in red.
  • The spread — the gap between the highest bid and the lowest ask. A tight spread signals an active, liquid market; a wide spread signals a thin one.

A trade happens when a buyer and seller agree on a price — when a bid and an ask meet.

Market depth and liquidity

The total volume of orders stacked up at different prices is the market depth. A deep order book absorbs large trades without the price jumping much. A shallow one can swing sharply on a single big order — one reason smaller coins are so volatile.

When you place a market or limit order, you're interacting with this book. A market order eats into the existing orders; a limit order joins the book and waits.

What to be careful of

Order books can be misleading. Large orders sometimes appear and vanish (a tactic called spoofing) to nudge other traders, and thin books can be manipulated. Reading the book is useful context, not a guaranteed signal of where price is heading.

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Don't read too much into it

An order book shows intentions that can change in an instant. It is not a prediction. Crypto is volatile — only risk what you can afford to lose, and treat this as education, not financial advice.

Key takeaways

  • An order book lists live buy orders (bids) and sell orders (asks).
  • The spread is the gap between the best bid and best ask.
  • Deeper books mean steadier prices; thin books swing harder.
  • Order books can be manipulated, so treat them as context, not signals.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to understand the order book to buy crypto?

Not for a simple buy on a beginner-friendly app. But it helps you understand spreads and why large trades on small coins move the price.

What's a thin order book?

One with few orders and low volume. Prices can gap and slip easily, so even a modest trade can move the market noticeably.

LC

The Latest Crypto Team

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