The prop firm business model is built around two main revenue streams: challenge fees paid by traders entering evaluation programs, and a share of the profits generated by funded traders. Together, these create a business that can scale with relatively low overhead once the technology and processes are in place.
Challenge fees are typically charged as a one-time payment when a trader enters an evaluation. Fees vary based on account size, commonly ranging from $50 for a small account to several hundred dollars for larger tiers. Many firms refund the fee on the first payout, which reduces the perceived cost for the trader while still providing the firm with upfront revenue.
The profit share from funded traders represents the longer-term revenue stream. When a funded trader is profitable, the firm retains a percentage, commonly between 10 and 30 percent, of the gains. Managing this well requires a reliable risk engine that monitors accounts in real time, enforces loss limits automatically, and scales the funded trader base sustainably. Firms that get this balance right build a repeatable and highly scalable business.