TimelessMarket Theory
Educational only — not financial advice. Order behaviour varies by broker and market conditions; always confirm how your platform routes and fills orders.
Concept · Foundations

Order Types & How Orders Fill

Market, limit, stop — and the trade-off between price and certainty.

Overview

Every trade is sent to the market as an order, and the order type you choose decides the trade-off between certainty of execution and certainty of price. Getting this right is the difference between a clean entry and a costly surprise.

Four order types cover almost everything: market, limit, stop, and stop-limit.

The order types

How orders fill

The order book — limit orders waiting to be filled ASKS (sellers) BIDS (buyers) 102.00800 101.501200 101.00600 100.501500 100.10400 spread 99.90500 99.501700 99.00900 98.501300 98.00700 sizeprice A market buy liftsthe lowest asks;a limit buy waitsin the book.
The order book holds resting limit orders on each side. A market buy "lifts" the lowest asks; a limit buy joins the bids and waits. The gap between best bid and best ask is the spread. (Illustrative.)

Orders that take liquidity (market orders, marketable limits) fill instantly against resting orders and pay the spread. Orders that provide liquidity (resting limits) wait in the book and may fill, partially fill, or never fill. In fast markets, a market order can fill several levels deep — that's slippage.

Mechanics & trade-offs

The whole game is price vs certainty. A market order guarantees you trade but not at what price; a limit order guarantees the price but not the trade. Stops convert to market or limit orders at a trigger, which is why a stop-market always exits (at some price) while a stop-limit can leave you holding a loser if price gaps through. Choose deliberately.

Honest assessment

Use a market order when…

  • You need certainty of execution now.
  • The instrument is liquid and the spread is tight.
  • Getting in/out matters more than a few cents.

Use a limit order when…

  • Price matters more than immediacy.
  • The spread is wide or the stock is thin.
  • You're placing resting orders away from the market.

Rule of thumb: liquid and urgent → market; price-sensitive or thin → limit; protective exit you must honour → stop-market (accept slippage) over stop-limit (accept non-fill risk).

Practice

You set a stop-limit sell and the stock gaps far below your limit. What happens?

It may not fill — the stop triggers a limit order at your price, but if price has gapped below it, there's no buyer there. A stop-market would have filled (at a worse price). This is the core trade-off.

What does a market order "cost" beyond commissions?

The spread and potential slippage — you take liquidity at the best available price, which may be worse than the last print in a fast market.

What's a marketable limit order?

A limit order priced at or through the opposite side of the book (e.g., a buy limit at the ask) — it fills like a market order but caps the worst price you'll accept.

This concept in the knowledge graph

PrerequisitesOrder flow, the bid/ask spread
UnlocksPrecise entries, stops & exits
RelatedSupport/resistance, risk
See alsoSlippage, liquidity

Resources

References

  1. Order types — definitions & investor guidance — SEC investor.gov.
  2. Market, limit & stop orders — Investopedia.