Prop Firm Daily Loss Calculator
Track daily P&L against prop firm maximum daily loss limits in real time. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Formula
Daily Loss Limit = Account Size x Limit% | Remaining = Limit - |Total P&L| | Usage% = |Total P&L| / Limit x 100
The daily loss limit is calculated as a percentage of the account size. Total P&L includes both closed trade results and unrealized floating profits/losses on open positions. Usage percentage shows how much of your daily allowance has been consumed.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Standard Day with Multiple Trades
Problem: A trader has a $100,000 prop firm account with 5% daily loss limit. Today they have closed P&L of -$1,200 across 5 trades, with open positions showing -$300. Max risk per trade is $500.
Solution: Daily Loss Limit = $100,000 x 5% = $5,000\nTotal P&L = -$1,200 + (-$300) = -$1,500\nRemaining before breach = $5,000 - $1,500 = $3,500\nUsage = $1,500 / $5,000 = 30%\nTrades remaining at $500 risk = floor($3,500 / $500) = 7\nSafe risk per next trade = $3,500 / 2 = $1,750\nStatus: SAFE (30% used)
Result: Remaining: $3,500 | Usage: 30% | Safe Risk: $1,750 | Status: SAFE | 7 more trades possible
Example 2: Critical Warning Level Scenario
Problem: Same $100,000 account, 5% daily limit. Closed P&L: -$3,500. Open positions: -$600. Max risk per trade: $500.
Solution: Daily Loss Limit = $5,000\nTotal P&L = -$3,500 + (-$600) = -$4,100\nRemaining = $5,000 - $4,100 = $900\nUsage = $4,100 / $5,000 = 82%\nTrades at $500 risk = floor($900 / $500) = 1\nSafe risk = $900 / 2 = $450\nStatus: CRITICAL (82% used) - should stop trading immediately
Result: Remaining: $900 | Usage: 82% | Status: CRITICAL | Only 1 trade at max risk | STOP TRADING
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a prop firm daily loss limit and why is it important?
A prop firm daily loss limit is the maximum amount of money a trader is allowed to lose in a single trading day before their account is either temporarily suspended or permanently failed. Most proprietary trading firms set this limit at 4 to 5 percent of the initial account balance. For a 100,000 dollar account with a 5 percent daily limit, you cannot lose more than 5,000 dollars in any single day. This limit exists because prop firms provide traders with their capital and need to protect it from catastrophic single-day losses. Breaching this limit even once typically results in immediate account failure, losing all progress including any profits earned during the challenge phase. Understanding and actively tracking your daily loss is arguably the most critical skill for prop firm trading success.
Does the daily loss limit include unrealized losses from open positions?
Yes, virtually all major prop firms include unrealized or floating losses when calculating the daily loss limit. This means if you have closed trades at a loss of 2,000 dollars and open positions currently showing a floating loss of 3,500 dollars, your total daily loss is 5,500 dollars, which would breach a 5,000 dollar daily limit. This is a critical detail that many traders overlook, thinking only closed trade losses count. Some firms calculate the limit based on the equity curve while others use the balance curve, and the distinction matters enormously. Equity-based calculations include floating profits and losses, making them more restrictive. Always read your prop firm rules carefully to understand exactly how they measure daily loss before you start trading.
How should I manage my trading when approaching the daily loss limit?
When you have used 50 percent or more of your daily loss allowance, you should significantly reduce your position sizes or stop trading entirely for the day. The worst mistake traders make is trying to recover losses aggressively, which typically leads to larger losses and account breach. Implement a personal stop at 50 to 60 percent of the maximum daily loss. For example, on a 5,000 dollar limit, set your personal stop at 2,500 to 3,000 dollars. If you hit this level, close all positions and walk away. This buffer protects you from a single bad trade pushing you over the limit. Many successful prop firm traders also implement a three-loss rule where they stop trading after three consecutive losing trades regardless of the dollar amount lost, preventing tilt-driven trading.
What happens if I breach the daily loss limit during a prop firm challenge?
Breaching the daily loss limit results in immediate failure of your prop firm challenge or funded account, depending on your current stage. During the challenge or evaluation phase, you will need to purchase a new challenge and start the entire process over. This means losing your challenge fee, which typically ranges from 200 to 1,000 dollars depending on account size. If you are already funded and breach the daily limit, you lose your funded account and all accumulated profits. Most firms do not offer second chances or exceptions for daily limit breaches, even if the breach was caused by a technical issue or extreme market event. Some firms like FTMO allow one free retry, but most firms require full repurchase. This zero-tolerance policy makes daily loss management the top priority for every prop firm trader.
How do different prop firms calculate daily loss limits differently?
Prop firms use two primary methods for calculating daily loss limits, and the difference significantly impacts trading strategy. The fixed balance method calculates the limit from your starting balance at the beginning of each day. If your account started the day at 102,000 dollars with a 5 percent limit, your maximum daily loss is 5,100 dollars. The trailing or initial balance method calculates from the initial starting balance regardless of profits earned, so on a 100,000 dollar account the limit is always 5,000 dollars. Some firms like FTMO use the daily starting equity method, while firms like The Funded Trader use the initial balance. Additionally, some firms reset the daily loss at midnight server time while others reset at the start of a new trading session. Always verify the exact calculation method and reset time before trading a prop firm account.
What is the relationship between daily loss limit and maximum total drawdown?
The daily loss limit and maximum total drawdown are two separate risk parameters that work together to protect prop firm capital. The daily loss limit caps single-day losses, typically at 4 to 5 percent, while the maximum total drawdown caps cumulative losses over the entire challenge period, typically at 8 to 12 percent. You can breach either limit independently. For example, you could have five losing days of 2 percent each without breaching the daily limit but reaching 10 percent total drawdown. Conversely, you could be profitable overall but have one terrible day that breaches the daily limit. Smart traders plan their risk budget across both constraints. With a 10 percent total drawdown limit and 5 percent daily limit, you effectively have only two maximum loss days before reaching the total limit, emphasizing why daily loss management is so critical.