Where is the mark price and the latest price difference in the OKX contract? Look at the liquidation judgment, floating profit changes and sentiment error together
Editorial Note
Last reviewed: 5/12/2026
This page is maintained by the OKX Guide editorial team and cross-checked against platform rules, product docs and internal topic pages.
If platform rules change, treat the official documentation as the final source of truth.
SEO Brief
What this page should solve first
Where is the mark price and the latest price difference in the OKX contract? Look at the liquidation judgment, floating profit changes and sentiment error together sits in the Futures Trading topic cluster and targets comparison-stage search intent. This page is structured as a tutorial. This is a refined page for novices who have just started to look at the contract price panel, focusing on breaking down the mark price, the latest transaction price and the liquidation judgment.
Search users usually compare more than one surface-level action. They also look for connected terms such as The difference between the OKX mark price and the latest price, Mark price and Latest transaction price, so the page should keep the main explanation, follow-up checks and related paths together.
Priority checks before the main body
Review these signals first so you do not solve only the surface-level step.
- The difference between the OKX mark price and the latest price Check the live page requirement, entry consistency and what should happen after this action.
- Mark price Check the live page requirement, entry consistency and what should happen after this action.
- Latest transaction price Check the live page requirement, entry consistency and what should happen after this action.
- Strong liquidation judgment Check the live page requirement, entry consistency and what should happen after this action.
Recommended reading and action path
If you plan to continue with this topic, use the order below before moving deeper.
- Suggested path 1 First distinguish the positions of the mark price and the latest transaction price on the page, and do not confuse the two numbers as one result. Finishing this check first usually makes the next step cleaner.
- Suggested path 2 Look at which price your floating profits, floating losses and forced liquidation risks are more closely linked to. Don’t just follow the fastest-moving numbers. Finishing this check first usually makes the next step cleaner.
- Suggested path 3 If short-term fluctuations make you very nervous, you should first return to risk judgment instead of immediately adding or reducing positions. Finishing this check first usually makes the next step cleaner.
- Suggested path 4 After the price logic is clarified, leverage and position management actions can be continued. Finishing this check first usually makes the next step cleaner.
Search users usually ask these follow-up questions
These questions often appear alongside the current topic and are worth reviewing with the main article and FAQ.
What do people most often miss about The difference between the OKX mark price and the latest price?
Read this together with the main steps, constraints and related pages on the same topic.
When should you stop instead of moving on?
Read this together with the main steps, constraints and related pages on the same topic.
What should you do after this page?
Read this together with the main steps, constraints and related pages on the same topic.
Related pages to continue with
Once the current decision is clear, continue on the same topic path to fill the upstream and downstream gaps.
- What to Check Before Opening an OKX Futures Trade: Mode, Leverage, Margin and Stop-Loss Useful as the next read after this page.
- 4 Common OKX Futures Stop-Loss Mistakes: Too Tight, Amount-Only Thinking, Ignoring Volatility and Changing the Plan Useful as the next read after this page.
- Why OKX Futures Leads to Overtrading: Signal Overload, Frequent Flips and Overnight Risk Useful as the next read after this page.
- How to calculate funding rate and transaction fee separately in OKX contract? Don’t just focus on the cost of opening and closing positions Useful as the next read after this page.
This is a refined page for novices who have just started to look at the contract price panel, focusing on breaking down the mark price, the latest transaction price and the liquidation judgment. This refined guide keeps Mark price, Latest transaction price and Strong liquidation judgment in one decision path so the next move stays clear.
Who This Is For
- Best for readers trying to handle The difference between the OKX mark price and the latest price without backtracking mid-process.
- Useful if Mark price or Latest transaction price is already on screen but the order still feels unclear.
- Helpful when you want to sort out Strong liquidation judgment and Floating profit changes before moving deeper into OKX.
Why Start Here
Many people look at the latest price and think everything is clear, but it is often not what really affects liquidation and risk judgment. Most friction at this stage comes from checking Mark price, Latest transaction price and Strong liquidation judgment separately instead of as one flow.
Suggested Path
- First distinguish the positions of the mark price and the latest transaction price on the page, and do not confuse the two numbers as one result.
- Look at which price your floating profits, floating losses and forced liquidation risks are more closely linked to. Don’t just follow the fastest-moving numbers.
- If short-term fluctuations make you very nervous, you should first return to risk judgment instead of immediately adding or reducing positions.
- After the price logic is clarified, leverage and position management actions can be continued.
Checks Before You Act
- Confirm that the current page is really about Mark price before mixing in other issues.
- Review whether Latest transaction price is already clearly shown in the current account, device or path.
- If Strong liquidation judgment is still uncertain, do not rush into the next funding or trading action.
- When Floating profit changes conflicts with what the page shows, pause and review the previous step first.
FAQ
What do people most often miss about The difference between the OKX mark price and the latest price?
The usual miss is checking Mark price without confirming Latest transaction price in the same flow.
When should you stop instead of moving on?
Stop when Strong liquidation judgment is still unclear or when Floating profit changes does not match the live page state.
What should you do after this page?
Return to the main setup or action page for this topic, confirm the prerequisites, then continue with the next operation.
Next Step
If this part is clear, continue with What to Check Before Opening an OKX Futures Trade: Mode, Leverage, Margin and Stop-Loss / 4 Common OKX Futures Stop-Loss Mistakes: Too Tight, Amount-Only Thinking, Ignoring Volatility and Changing the Plan