Binance Futures support documentation explains that the TP/SL Split Target feature lets users divide a futures position into multiple take-profit or stop-loss orders instead of placing one exit order for the whole position. The guide says users can add split targets from the USD?-M Futures position area, choose Take Profit or Stop Loss, select market or limit order types, and assign portions of the position with size controls.
The practical value is staged execution. A trader can take partial profit into strength, keep a smaller runner open, or layer risk reduction if volatility rises. Binance says up to four split targets can be added for each order type, and the interface shows how the position is allocated across targets.
The common mistake is using split targets to avoid making a real decision. Four profit targets do not fix a poor entry, excessive leverage or a stop placed too close to liquidation. Before opening the position, write down the invalidation level, maximum acceptable loss, whether the trigger should use mark price or last price, and what percentage of the position should close at each target.
For active futures users, a simple template is: one emergency stop based on account risk, one partial take-profit where risk-reward improves, one second take-profit near a higher-time-frame level, and a rule for moving or not moving the stop after the first target fills.
Sources: Binance TP/SL Split Target guide; Binance TP/SL FAQ.
Risk notice: Futures and perpetual contracts use leverage and can liquidate positions quickly. This article is educational and is not trading advice.
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