
Prop firm rules are the set of risk parameters every trader must follow during a funded account evaluation, including drawdown limits, daily loss caps, consistency requirements, and minimum trading days. Violate any one of them and the challenge ends immediately, regardless of your profit target progress. Understanding these rules before you buy a challenge is not optional; it determines which firm your trading style can actually survive.
In 2026, the prop firm industry has standardized around a handful of core rule types, but the way each firm applies them varies enough to make one firm a good fit and another a near-impossible hurdle for the same trader. A tracked dataset of 10,665 real prop firm challenges across 8 firms over 18 months showed a 27% pass rate and only a 19.5% payout rate, according to YouTube research on the consistency rule. Most failures trace back to two rule categories: drawdown breaches and consistency violations.
This guide breaks down every evaluation rule that matters, explains how the four major firms apply them, and shows you how to compare them side by side before committing to a challenge.
What this article covers:
The three drawdown models and how each one affects your trading room
How the consistency rule works and why it catches traders who already hit their profit target
A side-by-side comparison table: FTMO, Apex Trader Funding, The 5%ers, and FundedNext
Practical strategies to trade within each rule without capping your upside
The Three Drawdown Models: Which One Is Actually Hardest to Survive
Every prop firm enforces two parallel drawdown rules simultaneously: a daily loss limit and a maximum drawdown. Both must be tracked at all times. Breach either one and the account is closed permanently, with no appeal.
The number on the label (5%, 10%) matters less than the model used to calculate it. Two firms can both advertise "10% max drawdown" and operate completely differently.
Static Drawdown (Fixed Floor)
Static drawdown sets the loss floor at a fixed percentage below your initial account balance. It never moves, regardless of how much profit you generate.
Example: On a $100,000 account with 10% static drawdown, the floor is always $90,000. Whether your account grows to $115,000 or stays flat, the floor stays at $90,000. As your account grows, the gap between your current balance and the floor actually widens, giving you more room to trade.
Firms using static drawdown: FTMO, The 5%ers, FundedNext.
This is the most trader-friendly model for active traders. Your risk of breaching the floor decreases as you profit, not increases.
EOD Trailing Drawdown (End-of-Day Trailing)
The floor follows your account equity upward, but only updates once per day at the daily close. Intraday peaks have no permanent effect.
Example: You start at $100,000 with a $5,000 trail. You run up to $103,000 intraday and close the day at $101,000. The floor moves to $96,000 (based on the $101,000 close), not $98,000. If you'd closed flat, the floor wouldn't move at all.
This model is more forgiving than tick-by-tick trailing because a strong intraday session that reverses does not permanently cost you drawdown room.
Tick-by-Tick Trailing Drawdown (Intraday Trailing)
The floor updates in real time with every equity peak, including unrealized gains from open positions. This is the most punishing model.
Example: A position runs +$2,000 unrealized intraday, moving the floor up $2,000. You close the trade flat. You paid for that intraday peak with permanent drawdown room even though you never locked in a dollar of profit.
The critical implication: Apex Trader Funding uses an EOD trailing drawdown that starts trailing from your peak balance and never converts to static. According to industry data, Apex's trailing drawdown rule is responsible for failing approximately 95% of evaluations. A profitable early run can permanently tighten your floor, leaving less room than when you started.
Daily Loss Limit: The Second Kill Switch
Most firms layer a daily loss cap on top of the maximum drawdown. This is a hard stop on losses within a single trading session.
Critical detail: Daily loss limits include unrealized (floating) P&L from open positions. If you have a position showing -$4,800 unrealized on a $100,000 account with a 5% daily limit ($5,000), you are 96% of the way to a breach before closing a single trade.
The daily reset time also varies. FTMO resets at midnight CET. Trading at your local midnight does not trigger the reset for most international traders.
| Rule | FTMO | Apex Trader Funding | The 5%ers | FundedNext |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daily loss limit | 5% of day-start balance | None during eval | 4% of account balance | 5% of account balance |
| Max drawdown % | 10% | Trailing ($2.5K-$6K) | 5% (stricter) | 10% |
| Drawdown type | Static (initial balance) | EOD Trailing (never locks) | Static (initial balance) | Static (initial balance) |
| Drawdown floor on $100K | $90,000 (fixed) | Moves with peak | $95,000 (fixed) | $90,000 (fixed) |
The Consistency Rule: The Rule That Ends Payouts Nobody Sees Coming
The consistency rule is the most misunderstood prop firm rule in existence. Traders breach it after hitting their profit target, and often only discover it exists when they request their first payout.
The plain-English definition: A consistency rule limits how much of your total evaluation profit can come from any single trading day. If a firm's rule is 40%, your single best day cannot represent more than 40% of your total profit at payout time. It is not a loss limit. It is not a profit target. It is a shape test for your equity curve.
The firm is not asking how much you made. It is asking how you made it.
How the Math Works in Practice
Say FundedNext's rule is 40% and you are trading a $100,000 account toward an $8,000 Phase 1 target.
Day 1: You catch a strong trend and make $3,500.
Days 2-10: You grind out the remaining $4,500 across nine sessions.
Final total: $8,000. Profit target hit.
Day 1 share: $3,500 / $8,000 = 43.75%. Consistency rule breached.
You hit the profit target and still cannot withdraw. The only fix is to keep trading, adding more days of smaller gains until Day 1 drops below 40% of the total.
The 5%ers apply the same logic at 50%. On a $25,000 account targeting $1,500 in Phase 1, your single best day cannot exceed $750.
Which Firms Have a Consistency Rule in 2026
| Firm | Consistency Rule | Threshold | Where It Applies |
|---|---|---|---|
| FTMO | Swing accounts only | Max 30% of profit from one trade | Evaluation + Funded |
| Apex Trader Funding | Funded accounts only | Removed from evaluation in 2023 | Funded phase |
| The 5%ers | Yes | Best day โค 50% of total profits | Evaluation + Funded |
| FundedNext | Yes | Best day โค 40% of total profits | Evaluation + Funded |
The part most coverage misses: FTMO does not apply a standard daily consistency rule during its two-phase evaluation. Its Swing account restricts any single trade to a maximum of 30% of total profit, which is a trade-level rule rather than a day-level rule. Standard FTMO accounts have no consistency rule at all, which is a meaningful structural advantage for traders with concentrated strategies.
Three Ways the Consistency Rule Catches Good Traders
The monster day early in the challenge. You catch a high-conviction setup on Day 2 and make 60% of your target in one session. Even if you trade conservatively for the rest of the challenge, that day's share may never dilute enough to clear the threshold.
The final-push trade. You are close to the profit target and take a larger position to finish the challenge quickly. One big day pushes you over the target but also over the consistency threshold simultaneously.
The payout timing mistake. You pass the challenge, request a payout, and only then discover the consistency check is applied at payout time, not at challenge completion. The funded account has been live for weeks with no warning.
How to Trade Around the Consistency Rule
Set a daily profit cap before you trade. If the rule is 40%, your personal daily target should be no more than 30-35% of your remaining profit target. This builds in a buffer.
After a big day, keep trading smaller. Do not rush to withdraw. Add three to five normal sessions to dilute the outsized day's percentage share.
Calculate your consistency threshold in dollars before placing your first trade. On a FundedNext $100,000 account with an $8,000 target and a 40% rule, your daily cap is $3,200. Know that number before the session opens.
Full Prop Firm Rules Comparison: FTMO, Apex, The 5%ers, and FundedNext (2026)
The table below compares the complete evaluation rule set across the four most-compared prop firms in 2026. Fees shown are approximate for a $100,000 account. Always verify current rules directly with each firm before purchasing, as terms change.
| Rule | FTMO | Apex Trader Funding | The 5%ers | FundedNext |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Profit target (Phase 1) | 10% | 6% (single phase) | 6% | 8% |
| Profit target (Phase 2) | 5% | N/A | N/A | 5% |
| Daily loss limit | 5% of day-start balance | None during eval | 4% of account balance | 5% of account balance |
| Max drawdown | 10% | Trailing $2.5K-$6K | 5% | 10% |
| Drawdown type | Static | EOD Trailing (never locks) | Static | Static |
| Consistency rule | Swing only (30% per trade) | Funded phase only | Best day โค 50% | Best day โค 40% |
| Min trading days | 4 per phase | None | None | 5 per phase |
| Time limit | None | None | None | None |
| News trading | Restricted (Normal accounts) | Allowed | Restricted (5 min buffer) | Allowed (Stellar model) |
| Weekend holding | Swing only | Not allowed | Allowed | Allowed |
| Profit split (standard) | 80% (up to 90%) | 90% | 50% (scales to 100%) | 80% (up to 90%) |
| Challenge fee (~$100K) | ~โฌ540 | Varies by plan | ~$495-$595 | ~$549-$649 |
Reading This Table for Your Trading Style
If you trade concentrated, event-driven strategies (few trades, large position sizing on high-conviction setups): FTMO's standard accounts are the most structurally compatible. No daily consistency rule, static drawdown, and no time limit means you can wait for your best setups without daily pressure.
If you use an automated system or EA: Apex's single-phase evaluation with no consistency rule during the challenge is simpler to pass, but the EOD trailing drawdown is the trade-off. An EA that runs up a strong early equity peak will permanently tighten the trailing floor.
If you are a swing trader holding positions overnight: The 5%ers' static drawdown with no time limit is designed for this style. The 50% consistency threshold is more lenient than FundedNext's 40%, though the 5% max drawdown is tighter than the industry standard 10%.
If you want the lowest entry barrier: FundedNext's Phase 1 target of 8% (vs. FTMO's 10%) and its policy of paying 15% profit split even during evaluation are unique. No other major firm pays out during the challenge phase.
Dollar-Value Translation for a $25,000 Account
Percentages are abstract until you translate them into dollars. Here is what the rules look like in real money on a $25,000 account:
| Rule | FTMO | The 5%ers | FundedNext |
|---|---|---|---|
| Daily loss limit | $1,250 | $1,000 | $1,250 |
| Max drawdown floor | $22,500 | $23,750 | $22,500 |
| Phase 1 profit target | $2,500 | $1,500 | $2,000 |
| Max best day (consistency) | No rule | $750 | $800 |
The real insight here: The 5%ers has the most achievable profit target ($1,500) but the tightest single-day cap ($750). A trader who makes $800 on their best day and $700 across all other days combined would hit the target and breach the consistency rule simultaneously.
Other Evaluation Rules That Can End Your Challenge
Drawdown and consistency get most of the attention, but three additional rule categories end challenges at a rate that surprises traders who focus only on the headline numbers.
Minimum Trading Days
FTMO requires a minimum of 4 trading days per phase. FundedNext requires 5. A "trading day" is defined as any day where at least one trade was opened and closed. A day where you only had an open floating position does not count.
This rule prevents traders from compressing the entire challenge into one or two sessions. The practical implication: even if you hit the profit target in three sessions, you cannot pass until the minimum day count is satisfied. Plan your challenge timeline accordingly.
News Trading Restrictions
FTMO (Normal accounts): No trading 2 minutes before or after high-impact news events
The 5%ers: No trading 5 minutes before or after high-impact news
FundedNext (Stellar model): News trading allowed
Apex Trader Funding: News trading allowed
For traders who rely on economic releases (NFP, CPI, FOMC) as primary setups, this rule eliminates entire categories of opportunity. A high profit split means nothing if the rulebook bans the strategy generating the profits.
Weekend Holding
FTMO Normal accounts: Must close all positions before the weekend
Apex Trader Funding: No weekend holding allowed (futures markets close)
The 5%ers: Weekend holding permitted
FundedNext: Weekend holding permitted
Swing traders running multi-day positions need to verify this rule before selecting a firm. FTMO's Swing account allows weekend holding but applies the 30% per-trade consistency rule that the Normal account does not have.
Expert Advisors (EAs) and Algorithmic Trading
All four major firms allow EAs, with the following restrictions:
High-frequency trading (HFT) is universally banned
Copy trading and trade mirroring are banned at FTMO and most firms
Latency arbitrage strategies are banned
Grid and martingale strategies are permitted at some firms but flagged for review
The practical test: if the strategy requires co-location or exploits price feed latency, it will be detected and disqualified. Standard algorithmic systems running on MT4/MT5 are generally permitted.
How to Match Prop Firm Rules to Your Trading Strategy
The most expensive mistake in prop trading is buying a challenge at the wrong firm. The fee is recoverable. The weeks of trading time lost to a structurally incompatible ruleset are not.
Use this framework to match firm rules to your trading approach before purchasing.
Step 1: Identify Your Drawdown Sensitivity
Translate the drawdown rules into dollar amounts for the account size you intend to trade. Then ask: does my average losing streak ever approach this number?
A trader who regularly experiences 6-8% drawdowns during normal operations cannot survive a 5% max drawdown firm like The 5%ers, regardless of the profit target. The math does not work.
Rule of thumb: Your personal maximum drawdown (from your trading history) should be no more than 50-60% of the firm's maximum drawdown limit. This builds a buffer for the evaluation's psychological pressure, which typically causes traders to trade larger than their historical norm.
Step 2: Check Your Best-Day Ratio
Review your last 30-60 trading sessions. Calculate what percentage your single best day represents of your total profit over that period. If that number exceeds 40%, you will likely breach FundedNext's consistency rule. If it exceeds 50%, you will breach The 5%ers.
This calculation takes five minutes and can save hundreds of dollars in failed challenge fees.
Step 3: Verify Strategy-Specific Rules
Before purchasing any challenge, confirm three things:
Can you trade during news events your strategy relies on?
Can you hold positions over the weekend if your trades require it?
Is your trading system (manual, EA, or semi-automated) explicitly permitted?
A firm's headline profit split is irrelevant if the rulebook bans your strategy.
Use a Discount Code to Reduce Your Evaluation Cost
Challenge fees add up quickly, especially across multiple attempts. JoinProp tracks exclusive discount codes across 200+ prop firms, including FTMO, Apex, The 5%ers, and FundedNext. Reducing the challenge fee by 10-25% changes the economics of multiple attempts significantly.
Browse current prop firm discount codes on JoinProp and compare evaluation rules side by side before committing to a firm.
Frequently Asked Questions: Prop Firm Rules
What is the most common reason traders fail prop firm evaluations?
The maximum daily loss limit is the single most common breach, typically caused by oversizing a position or revenge trading after a losing session. The second most common failure is the consistency rule, which catches traders who generate a disproportionate share of their profits on a single strong day. According to Fundify's analysis of prop firm rule violations, both failures are largely preventable with pre-session planning.
Does FTMO have a consistency rule?
FTMO does not apply a daily consistency rule to its standard (Normal) accounts during evaluation. Its Swing account applies a trade-level rule limiting any single trade to a maximum of 30% of total profits. For traders on Normal accounts, there is no consistency rule during the challenge or verification phase.
What is the difference between static and trailing drawdown?
Static drawdown sets a fixed floor from your initial balance that never moves. On a $100,000 account with 10% static drawdown, the floor is always $90,000. Trailing drawdown moves the floor upward as your equity peaks, permanently tightening your available room. Apex Trader Funding uses EOD trailing drawdown that never converts to static, meaning a profitable early run reduces your available drawdown for the rest of the evaluation.
Can you hold trades over the weekend on prop firm challenges?
It depends on the firm. The 5%ers and FundedNext allow weekend holding. FTMO permits it only on Swing accounts. Apex Trader Funding does not allow weekend holding because it trades futures markets that close on Friday. Always verify weekend holding rules before entering any trade you plan to hold past Friday's session close.
What happens if you breach the consistency rule after hitting the profit target?
You cannot request a payout until the consistency condition is satisfied. The account remains active and you must continue trading to dilute the outsized day's percentage share of total profits. The challenge is not failed; it is simply locked from payout until the ratio comes back within the threshold.
How do minimum trading days work?
A trading day is counted only when at least one trade is both opened and closed within the session. A day with only a floating open position does not count. FTMO requires 4 trading days per phase, FundedNext requires 5. Neither firm has a maximum time limit, so there is no penalty for taking longer.

