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Setting Up a Demo Account on Any Platform

A demo account lets you practice trading risk-free, and this guide walks you through setting up and using demo accounts on MT4, MT5, cTrader, TradingView, and more.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
#platforms#tools
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Setting Up a Demo Account on Any Platform

A demo account is the only free lunch in trading: live market data, real platform mechanics, zero financial risk. Yet most beginners skip it or misuse it, fund live too early, and discover that muscle memory was never built. This guide covers setup across the major platforms and — more importantly — how to use a demo so it actually predicts live performance.

Core Concepts: Why Demo Discipline Predicts Live Results

Beginners skip demos because they feel "fake." But the demo is where you wire muscle memory — platform clicks, indicator layouts, risk-per-trade calculations — into habit before emotional stakes corrupt your decisions. Trade a demo for at least two months before funding live. The goal is not to prove you can profit; it is to prove your process is repeatable under realistic conditions.

A demo only transfers to live if it mirrors live conditions. A $1,000,000 demo balance with 5-lot positions teaches nothing about sizing on a $5,000 account. A demo with 1:500 leverage teaches nothing about EU-regulated 1:30 caps. The rule: configure the demo to match the live account you will actually fund — same balance, same leverage, same instruments, same risk per trade (0.5–1%).

Concrete example: a trader demos with $100,000 and risks $5,000 per trade (5%) for two months, hits 55% win rate, and feels ready. They fund a $5,000 live account, size to 1% ($50 risk), and immediately freeze — the position sizes feel trivial, the fear of loss is new, and the demo "edge" evaporates. The demo never tested the psychology of real sizing. For the paper-trading workflow that does, see /paper.

Practical Application: Setup and Realistic Use

Step 1 — Pick the platform you will actually trade and configure the demo to match live.

Platform Demo setup path Expiry Realistic features
MetaTrader 4/5 File → Open Account → Demo 30–90 days inactive Full execution, EAs
cTrader Right-click Accounts → Create Demo Broker-dependent DOM, ECN spreads
TradingView Paper Trading panel Unlimited (account) Simulated fills, no spread
NinjaTrader Simulation connection Unlimited Full DOM, sim fills
thinkorswim Toggle paperMoney Unlimited Identical to live

Step 2 — Configure the demo realistically. Set the starting balance to what you will actually fund ($1,000–$5,000, not $100,000). Set leverage to your live regulator's cap (1:30 EU, 1:50 US forex, 1:20 UK CFDs). Trade the exact instruments and timeframes you will trade live.

Step 3 — Simulate the skills that fail under pressure. Most losses come from execution errors, not analysis errors.

Skill How to drill Target reps
Order placement Market, limit, stop entries 50+ each
Stop adjustments Drag-and-drop on chart 30+
Risk per trade Calculate size for 0.5% and 1% 50+
Multiple positions Hold 3–5 trades simultaneously 20+ sessions
Platform errors Disconnect internet mid-trade 5+
News volatility Trade NFP or CPI release 5+

Step 4 — Journal every demo trade. Entry reason, exit reason, emotions, mistakes. Without a journal the demo produces no learning — it is just screen time. Use /journal or a spreadsheet.

Step 5 — Track demo metrics against live-readiness thresholds. After 100 trades, compute win rate, average win, average loss, payoff ratio, and max drawdown. Live-readiness thresholds: win rate ≥45%, payoff ratio ≥1.3, max drawdown ≤15% of demo balance, and no single trading day exceeding your 3% daily loss limit. Falling short on any metric means more demo time, not a live deposit.

Demo-to-live readiness checklist:

  • 100+ demo trades on the target platform
  • Demo balance matches planned live funding
  • Leverage matches live regulator cap
  • Win rate and risk/reward stable over 50 trades
  • Can manage 5 simultaneous positions without confusion
  • Written trading rules documented
  • Every trade journaled at /journal

Common Mistakes

Mistake 1: Treating the demo like a video game. Risking 20% per trade on a $100,000 balance builds gambling habits that explode on a live account. Correction: cap demo risk at 0.5–1% per trade, exactly as you would live; if you cannot follow the rule on a demo, you will not follow it live.

Mistake 2: Using a $1,000,000 demo balance. Huge balances teach nothing about position sizing on real capital and collapse when real money brings real fear. Correction: set the demo balance to your planned live funding; learn sizing at the scale you will actually trade.

Mistake 3: Skipping the demo for "intuition." Your intuition is untested. The demo exists to test it before money is on the line. Correction: complete 100 demo trades minimum before funding; no exceptions, regardless of how confident you feel.

Advanced Tips

To bridge the psychology gap, fund live with the smallest possible size (0.01 lots, 1 share) for the first two weeks — the fear of real loss, even at trivial dollar amounts, surfaces emotional patterns the demo cannot. Transition to full size only after 20 live trades at small size match your demo metrics. Test new strategies or order types on /paper before deploying live, and reconcile demo versus live fill quality at /journal to quantify the execution gap.

Summary

A demo account is mandatory, but only valuable if configured to match live conditions. Set the balance, leverage, and instruments to your planned live setup, drill execution skills to muscle memory, journal every trade, and complete 100+ trades before funding. Go live with the smallest possible size first — the psychology of real money is the one variable the demo cannot simulate.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk