Why Traders Fail Prop Firm Evaluations: Common Reasons
Prop firm failures cluster around over-sizing, ignoring drawdown type, news violations, revenge trading, and overtrading — each with a prevention rule.
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Why Traders Fail Prop Firm Evaluations: Common Reasons
Evaluation failures are remarkably uniform. The same five mistakes account for the vast majority of blown accounts. None are about strategy — they are about risk, rules, and psychology. Recognizing yours is the first step to not repeating it.
1. Over-sizing early
The most common failure. A trader risks 1.5–2% per trade, loses three in a row, and is suddenly 5% down — at the daily limit on day one. Prevention: cap risk at 0.5% per trade and one position at a time. If you cannot pass with 0.5%, you cannot pass with 2%; you will just fail faster.
2. Ignoring the drawdown model
Traders read "10% max drawdown" and assume it is static. On a balance-based model, a 4% profit followed by a 5% loss can fail you even though you are still net up. Prevention: before paying, identify the model. If it is balance-based or trailing, plan for a cushion of at least 3% before any normal risk — trade at 0.3% until you are up 3%.
3. News and rule violations
A single trade held through an NFP release that spikes 40 pips against you voids the account. So does a weekend hold when banned, or an Expert Advisor left running. Prevention: block the calendar 15 minutes around tier-1 releases; close all positions before the weekend; never run automation you have not tested against the firm's rules.
4. Revenge trading after a loss
A clean 0.5R loss becomes a 2R loss when the trader immediately re-enters larger to "get it back." Two or three revenge cycles hit the daily limit. Prevention: a mandatory 15-minute break after any loss and a hard "two losses and done for the day" rule. Revenge trading is the single fastest way to fail an evaluation.
5. Overtrading to hit the target
The 8% target feels far away, so traders force 8 trades a day, most of them B-grade. The B-grade trades bleed 0.2R each, and the daily limit arrives before the target. Prevention: cap at 3–4 A-grade setups per day. If no A-grade setup appears, do not trade. Minimum trading days are 3–5, not 20; you do not need to trade every day.
Less common but fatal
- Account inactivity: some firms void accounts unused for 30 days.
- Copy trading or signal services: explicitly banned at most firms; detection voids the account.
- Martingale and grid systems: blow through drawdown limits in a single adverse run.
The bottom line
Evaluation failures come from over-sizing, ignoring the drawdown model, news violations, revenge trading, and overtrading — not from bad strategy. Cap risk at 0.5%, know your drawdown model, avoid tier-1 news, take a break after losses, and trade only A-grade setups. Diagnose your last failure by cause before paying again.
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