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Trading Styles Pro tier 2 min read

Swing Trading

Holding positions for days to weeks.

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What is Swing Trading?

Swing trading involves holding positions for several days to a few weeks, capturing intermediate price moves. Most prop firms permit swing trading but with caveats: weekend holding rules vary widely, some firms require all positions closed before Friday market close, and overnight financing (swap) costs apply on non-swap-free accounts. Swing traders should prioritize firms with no minimum trading days and clear weekend holding policies (FTMO, The 5%ers, and FundedNext are typically swing-friendly).

Key takeaways

Holding positions for days to weeks.
Most prop firms permit swing trading but with caveats: weekend holding rules vary widely, some firms require all positions closed before Friday market close, and overnight financing (swap) costs apply on non-swap-free accounts.
Swing traders should prioritize firms with no minimum trading days and clear weekend holding policies (FTMO, The 5%ers, and FundedNext are typically swing-friendly).

Swing Trading vs. Scalping

Two terms that frequently get conflated. Here's how they actually differ.

Swing TradingTrading Styles · PRO
ScalpingTrading Styles · PRO
Holding positions for days to weeks.
Very short-term trading, often seconds to minutes.

Frequently asked questions

What is Swing Trading?
Swing trading involves holding positions for several days to a few weeks, capturing intermediate price moves. Most prop firms permit swing trading but with caveats: weekend holding rules vary widely, some firms require all positions closed before Friday market close, and overnight financing (swap) costs apply on non-swap-free accounts. Swing traders should prioritize firms with no minimum trading days and clear weekend holding policies (FTMO, The 5%ers, and FundedNext are typically swing-friendly).
Why does Swing Trading matter for prop firm traders?
Swing Trading affects how you're allowed to trade on a prop firm account. Many firms layer restrictions onto specific styles to protect their treasury — and those restrictions need to fit how you actually trade.
How is Swing Trading different from Scalping?
Swing Trading and Scalping are commonly confused. Swing Trading: Holding positions for days to weeks. Scalping, by contrast: Very short-term trading, often seconds to minutes.
What should traders watch out for with Swing Trading?
Style restrictions are often layered: a firm that allows scalping may still ban HFT-like behaviour, and minimum hold times can void otherwise legitimate trades.

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