Definition
A day order is an instruction to your broker to buy or sell a security at a specified price that remains active only for the current trading session. If the order is not executed before the market closes, it is automatically canceled.
Key points (quick)
– Duration: valid only for the remainder of the trading day (regular session) unless you specify otherwise.
– Common pairing: often used with a limit order (specify maximum buy or minimum sell price).
– Default behavior: many trading platforms use day order as the default if you do not choose another duration.
– Alternatives: good-til-canceled (GTC) stays active until canceled; immediate-or-cancel (IOC) fills what it can immediately and cancels the rest.
Understanding how day orders work
– Limit vs. market: a limit order sets a threshold price; a market order executes at the best available price immediately. A day order can be a limit or a market order, but when it’s a day limit order it only waits until market close for the limit price to be met.
– Session scope: “day” generally refers to the regular exchange trading hours (e.g., 9:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m. ET for US equities). Orders placed outside regular hours may behave differently depending on your broker.
– Execution behavior: if liquidity allows, a day order may be filled fully, partially, or not at all. Any unfilled portion is canceled at the end of that trading day.
When traders use day orders
– Intraday traders who plan to exit positions before close favor day orders because they automatically expire at session end.
– Traders who want a specific entry/exit price but do not want to watch markets for the whole day use day limit orders to avoid active monitoring.
– Nonprofessional investors should be aware that a day limit sell can execute during an unexpected price drop before they can react.
Step-by-step checklist for placing a day order
1. Decide the order type: market (execute now) or limit (target price).
2. Select quantity (number of shares or lots).
3. Set your price if using a limit order (maximum buy or minimum sell).
4. Confirm duration = “Day” (or leave unspecified if your platform defaults to Day).
5. Review estimated fees and total cost or proceeds.
6. Submit the order.
7. Monitor execution during the session; be aware unfilled portions will cancel at market close.
8. If you want the order to persist beyond today, re-enter it or choose GTC (if your broker offers GTC).
Worked numeric example
Assumptions: regular trading hours; no commissions for simplicity.
Scenario: You want to buy 100 shares of XYZ. Current last trade is $50. You place a day limit buy at $48.
– If, during the session, the stock trades at $47.50 and enough shares are available, your order will fill at or below $48. Suppose it fills entirely at $47.80.
– Cost = 100 shares × $47.80 = $4,780.
– If liquidity is thin and only 60 shares are available at or below $48 by mid-day, you get a partial fill of 60 shares; the remaining 40 shares remain open until the session ends. If they are not filled by close, that remaining portion is canceled automatically.
– If price never falls to $48 before the market closes, the entire order is canceled and you hold no position.
Note: different brokers may route and fill orders differently; partial fills are common when available supply/demand is limited.
Risks and practical tips
– Unexpected moves: a day limit sell can execute during a sudden decline, realizing a loss before you can respond.
– After-hours activity: price action outside regular hours typically will not fill a day order placed for regular hours unless your broker accepts extended-hours instructions.
– Check platform defaults: verify whether your broker defaults to day orders and whether you must explicitly choose GTC or other durations if you want a different lifespan.
Selected references
– Investopedia — Day Order: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/d/dayorder.asp
– U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (Investor.gov) — Order Types: https://www.investor.gov/introduction-investing/basics/how-markets-work/orders
– Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) — Types of Orders: https://www.finra.org/investors/learn-to-invest/types-orders
Educational disclaimer
This explainer is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell securities. Always verify order settings with your broker and consider consulting a licensed professional for guidance tailored to your situation.