

Vladimir Rybakov
Author

Snir Ahiel
Fact Checker
A prop firm (proprietary trading firm) gives traders access to company capital. You’re allowed to trade that capital only if you follow specific risk rules. If you stay within the rules and generate profits, you receive a profit split. If you break the rules (usually by exceeding drawdown limits or using banned strategies), you lose the account. That’s the model.
A prop firm is a capital partner.
Instead of you trying to grow a small personal account into something meaningful, a prop firm lets you prove you can manage risk first, then gives you a larger account size to trade. In return, you agree to:
This structure exists because the firm’s business is finding traders who can perform without blowing up.
Most prop firms follow a simple sequence:
You trade under pre-set rules such as:
If you pass, you receive a funded account (your job stays the same: follow rules, manage risk, trade your edge).
When you’re profitable and compliant, you withdraw according to the firm’s payout rules and your agreed split.
Not because it’s “easy.” Because it solves three practical problems:
Trading a $2,500 or $5,000 personal account limits what “good trading” can pay you. Prop firms let you trade larger account sizes if you can control downside.
A lot of traders don’t fail because they don’t know entries. They fail because they can’t control:
If the firm has a scaling plan, you can grow account size based on performance milestones—often faster than compounding a small personal account.
A prop firm is not:
If you don’t already have risk control, prop firm rules will expose that fast.
PipCy offers two evaluation paths with clearly defined rules:
PipCy lists prohibited strategies like HFT, arbitrage, tick scalping, and news spike exploitation, and it also states Martingale is not allowed.
A prop firm is a capital-for-performance deal: you get access to more funding only if you can trade within risk limits. If you want funding, the only thing that matters is whether you can stay consistent and rule-compliant.
If you want a prop firm with clearly stated rules and two evaluation styles (percentage-based and pip-based), start here: 👉 Take the challenge and get funded.
Pip firms evaluate you in a structured environment first, then grant funded access if you pass. What matters to you is that payout eligibility is based on performance + rule compliance, and violating drawdown/rules ends the account.
Compare max loss/drawdown, whether there’s a daily loss limit, the profit targets, and the scaling + payout split. Example: PipCy Classic highlights 12% max loss and no daily drawdown, with 1-step and 2-step targets clearly listed.
Risk mistakes: sizing too big, stacking losses, or trying to “rush” the target. Firms usually don’t fail traders for being slow they fail traders for breaking risk rules.