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Prop Trading

Prop Trading

Prop Trading

Top 10 Essential Terms Every Prop Trading Beginner Needs To Know

Top 10 Essential Terms Every Prop Trading Beginner Needs To Know

Top 10 Essential Terms Every Prop Trading Beginner Needs To Know

1 oct 2025

Top 10 Essential Terms Every Prop Trading Beginner NEEDS TO Know
Top 10 Essential Terms Every Prop Trading Beginner NEEDS TO Know
Top 10 Essential Terms Every Prop Trading Beginner NEEDS TO Know

Welcome to the world of prop firm evaluations! If you’ve decided to pursue a career as a proprietary trader, you're taking a serious step forward. But before you place your first simulated trade, you need to understand the language. Misunderstanding just one key term—especially around risk—can result in an immediate challenge failure.

This guide decodes the 10 most critical terms in the prop trading evaluation model. Mastering this vocabulary will prepare you for a successful start with BrightFunded.

The Foundation: Understanding the Business Model

1. Evaluation Fee / Account Fee

The Evaluation Fee is the initial, one-time payment made by the trader to gain access to the Trading Challenge. This fee covers the setup and administration of your simulated evaluation account.

The primary benefit to traders is that this fee is typically fully refundable once you successfully pass the challenge phases, are granted Funded Status, and receive your first profit payout. This transforms the cost into a refundable investment in your trading career.

2. Trading Challenge / Evaluation

The Trading Challenge is the mandatory, multi-stage assessment designed to test your trading skill and, more importantly, your risk management discipline. This is a simulated environment where you must demonstrate consistent profitability while adhering to the firm's strict rules.

Most evaluations are divided into Phase 1 and Phase 2, requiring different profit targets and timeframes for completion. Passing both phases is the prerequisite for moving to Funded Status.

3. Initial Balance / Account Size

The Initial Balance is the nominal capital level assigned to your challenge or funded account (e.g., $$10,000$, $$50,000$, or $$100,000$). This figure is not the firm's actual capital being traded by you, but it serves as the crucial benchmark for all your performance and risk metrics, including the profit target and drawdown limits.

The Metrics: Goals and Guardrails for Performance

4. Profit Target / Goal

The Profit Target is the minimum percentage or fixed dollar amount you must earn on your Initial Balance to successfully pass a phase of the Trading Challenge.

For example, a Phase 1 target might be 8%, while the subsequent Phase 2 target is often lower, perhaps 5%, reflecting the shift from proving potential to demonstrating sustainable risk-managed trading.

5. Drawdown (Daily & Overall)

The Drawdown is the most critical risk rule and represents the maximum loss allowed before your account is instantly failed. This protects the integrity of the firm's simulated environment and ensures you adhere to strict risk management.

  • Daily Drawdown: The maximum equity or floating loss allowed from the starting equity balance of that trading day. This rule resets every day and forces effective day-to-day risk management.

  • Overall Drawdown (Max Drawdown): The maximum cumulative loss allowed based on the highest achieved equity peak of the account. If your account equity falls below this total threshold, the challenge ends.

6. Leverage

Leverage is the capital multiplier offered by the firm that allows you to control larger positions in the market than your Initial Balance would otherwise permit. For example, 1:50 leverage means you can trade a position worth 50 times your margin requirement.

While leverage allows for amplified profits, it is a double-edged sword that also exponentially increases your risk exposure and the potential for hitting a drawdown limit. Treat it with respect.

7. Consistency Rule

The Consistency Rule is a protocol designed to prevent traders from passing an evaluation based purely on luck or one extremely high-risk trade. It typically requires that your best trading day does not account for an excessively large percentage of your overall profit target.

This rule encourages sustainable, measured strategies over time, proving you can execute a repeatable trading plan, not just gamble.

The Reward: Achieving Funded Status and Scaling

8. Funded Account (or Funded Status)

A Funded Account is granted to a trader who successfully completes all phases of the Trading Challenge. At BrightFunded, you are trading a simulated account that precisely mirrors the firm's live capital management structure, allowing the firm to safely track your performance.

This is the point where the profit-sharing agreement begins, turning your simulated success into real earnings.

9. Payout Split (or Profit Share)

The Payout Split, or Profit Share, is the agreed-upon percentage of the profits generated in the Funded Account that the trader keeps. For example, a 90/10 split means the trader receives 90% of the profit, and the firm retains 10%.

Prop firms compete based on these splits, and BrightFunded offers competitive rates to reward top-performing traders.

10. Scaling Plan

The Scaling Plan is the formal mechanism by which successful Funded Traders can increase their Initial Balance/Account Size. By consistently achieving profit milestones and maintaining strict adherence to all risk limits, a trader proves they can manage larger amounts of simulated capital responsibly.

The Scaling Plan is your roadmap to maximizing your long-term earning potential with the firm, allowing your 50,000 account to potentially grow to a 400,000 account or more.

Conclusion: Your Next Steps

You've now got the core vocabulary needed to navigate the prop trading landscape. Understanding the difference between Daily Drawdown and Overall Drawdown alone can save you from an instant failure!

Your next step should be to look at BrightFunded's specific rules for these terms. Would you like me to draft a section explaining the key differences between Absolute Drawdown and Relative Drawdown, which is often confused by new traders?