This is the section most blogs rush through. These rules are where 80%+ of failures happen. Understand them completely before you start.
Rule 1: The Profit Target
This is the percentage gain you must achieve on your simulated account to pass each phase. Most firms calculate this based on
closed positions only—so a trade sitting at 9% unrealized profit doesn't count until it's closed.
Trap: Near the end of your challenge, you're at 9.5% profit with an open trade showing +1%. You think you've passed. You haven't — not until that trade closes above your target threshold. Some traders hold winning trades too long waiting for "a bit more" and watch them reverse below target.
Fix: Know your firm's profit calculation method before you start. When within 0.5% of target, consider taking profits and locking in the pass.
Rule 2: The Daily Loss Limit (The Most Violated Rule in Prop Trading)
Industry data shows
71% of Phase 1 failures come from daily drawdown breaches — not strategy failure, not maximum drawdown, but the daily limit. Here's why this rule is so punishing.
The daily loss limit (typically 4–5%) resets every trading day at a set time (usually midnight server time or market close). If your account drops by that percentage in a single session — including open floating losses — the challenge ends
immediately and permanently, regardless of your overall account performance.
Real example:
You're on a $100,000 account with a 5% daily limit ($5,000).
- You enter a trade, and it goes -2%. You're down $2,000.
- Revenge trading impulse kicks in. You enter a second, larger trade to recover.
- That trade goes for -$3,100.
- Total day loss: $5,100. Challenge terminated.
You had $12,000 in profit from previous days. Doesn't matter. One session ended everything.
Two types of daily drawdown to know:
Balance-based daily drawdown: Calculated from your balance at the start of each trading day. Cleaner and easier to track — most beginner-friendly firms use this.
Equity-based (intraday) daily drawdown: Calculated from your
equity, including unrealized floating profits and losses in real time. This is the brutal one. Even if you're up $2,000 on a trade that hasn't closed yet, your floor has risen. If the trade pulls back, you can breach the daily limit even on a day where you ultimately close in profit.
Fix: Always know which type your firm uses. Set a personal daily loss limit at 2–2.5% — half the firm's hard limit. When you hit your personal limit, stop for the day.
Rule 3: Maximum Drawdown — Static vs. Trailing (The Most Misunderstood Rule)
This is the rule that silently destroys the most funded accounts. Most traders think they understand it. Most don't.
Static Drawdown:
Your maximum loss limit is fixed from your starting balance and
never moves. On a $100,000 account with 10% static drawdown, your floor is permanently $90,000.
- Account grows to $115,000? Floor stays at $90,000.
- Your buffer actually grows as you profit—from $10K to $25K.
- Most trader-friendly type. FTMO, FundedNext, and E8 Funding use static drawdown on most accounts.
Trailing Drawdown:
Your maximum loss limit
moves upward as your account reaches new equity peaks. The floor tracks your success—and it
never moves back down.
Example: You start at $100,000 with 10% trailing drawdown. Floor starts at $90,000.
- Account grows to $108,000 ? floor rises to $97,200
- Does the account grow to $112,000 ? floor rises to $100,800
- Account then drops to $101,000 ? Challenge terminated (below $100,800 floor)
You made $12,000 in profit and still failed. Why? Because the trailing floor chased every gain and left you almost no room to absorb a normal pullback.
Two types of trailing drawdown:- End-of-Day (EOD) trailing: Floor updates only based on closed profits at end of trading day. Much more forgiving — unrealized gains during the day don't move the floor.
- Intraday trailing: Floor moves in real time based on equity, including unrealized profits. The most dangerous type. Your floor can rise while a trade is open, then a reversal terminates your account even though you closed profitably.
Fix: Before buying any challenge, identify exactly which drawdown type it uses. If trailing, understand that your buffer doesn't grow as you profit — it stays roughly constant. Never increase position size after a winning streak thinking you have "more room."
Rule 4: Minimum Trading Days
Most firms require a minimum number of active trading days (typically 4–10) before you can pass or request a payout. This prevents traders from gambling on a single high-volatility event to meet their profit target in one session.
Trap: You hit your profit target on Day 2 trading a major news event. You think you're done. You're not — you still need 3 more trading days, and every day you trade is another opportunity to breach the drawdown rules.
Fix: Spread your challenge out deliberately. Trade your best setups across the minimum required days, then trade conservatively for any remaining days you need to complete.
Rule 5: Consistency Rules (The Hidden Disqualifier)
Many firms have a consistency rule that prevents any single trading day from accounting for more than 20–35% of your total profits. This prevents passing on one oversized lucky trade.
Example: You need $8,000 in profit to pass Phase 1 on a $100,000 account. With a 30% consistency rule, no single day's profit can exceed $2,400.
Most traders discover this rule only after building most of their profit on one exceptional trade — and finding out it doesn't count as valid consistent performance.
Fix: Read the consistency rule for your specific firm before you start. If it exists, spread your trading days intentionally to avoid any single day dominating your P&L.
Rule 6: Other Restrictions to Know
- News trading bans: Many firms prohibit trading within 2–5 minutes of high-impact events (NFP, CPI, FOMC). Violations can terminate the challenge.
- Weekend holding: Some firms prohibit holding positions over weekends. Others allow it. Know which applies.
- Lot size limits: Maximum position sizes to prevent gambling on a single trade.
- Expert Advisor (EA) rules: Automated trading may or may not be allowed — verify before using any bot or algorithm.