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Prop Firm Risk Manager Calculator

Build a daily risk management checklist with max loss, max drawdown, and position limits. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.

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Formula

Risk Per Trade ($) = Account x Risk% | Remaining DD = Max DD ($) - Current DD ($)

Risk per trade in dollars is calculated as a percentage of account size. Remaining drawdown is the difference between the maximum allowed drawdown and your current drawdown. Trades before breach is calculated by dividing remaining drawdown by risk per trade.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Standard $100K Account Risk Setup

Problem: A trader has a $100,000 prop firm account with 5% daily max loss and 10% max drawdown. They risk 1% per trade with up to 3 open trades. Current drawdown is 3%. Calculate risk parameters.

Solution: Daily max loss: $100,000 x 5% = $5,000\nMax drawdown: $100,000 x 10% = $10,000\nRisk per trade: $100,000 x 1% = $1,000\nTotal exposure (3 trades): $1,000 x 3 = $3,000 (3%)\nCurrent drawdown: $100,000 x 3% = $3,000\nRemaining drawdown: $10,000 - $3,000 = $7,000 (7%)\nTrades before breach: $7,000 / $1,000 = 7 consecutive losses\nDaily trades allowed: $5,000 / $1,000 = 5 trades

Result: Remaining DD: $7,000 | 7 trades before breach | Safety: 70%

Example 2: Aggressive Risk Assessment

Problem: A trader has a $50,000 account, 4% daily limit, 8% max drawdown, risks 2% per trade with 4 open positions, and is already 5% in drawdown.

Solution: Daily max loss: $50,000 x 4% = $2,000\nMax drawdown: $50,000 x 8% = $4,000\nRisk per trade: $50,000 x 2% = $1,000\nTotal exposure (4 trades): $1,000 x 4 = $4,000 (8%)\nCurrent drawdown: $50,000 x 5% = $2,500\nRemaining drawdown: $4,000 - $2,500 = $1,500 (3%)\nTrades before breach: $1,500 / $1,000 = 1 trade\nRisk Level: CRITICAL - only 1 loss away from breach

Result: Remaining DD: $1,500 | Only 1 trade before breach | CRITICAL risk level

Frequently Asked Questions

What is prop firm risk management and why is it critical?

Prop firm risk management is the systematic process of controlling your exposure to financial loss while trading with a proprietary firm's capital. Unlike personal trading accounts where drawdowns only affect your own money, violating prop firm risk rules results in immediate account termination and loss of your funded status. Most prop firms enforce strict daily loss limits (typically 4-5%) and maximum drawdown limits (typically 8-12%) that cannot be exceeded under any circumstances. Effective risk management is the single most important skill for maintaining a funded account long-term. Studies show that traders who survive their first three months with a prop firm almost always attribute their survival to disciplined risk management rather than exceptional trade selection.

How should I set my risk per trade on a prop firm account?

The recommended risk per trade on a prop firm account is between 0.5% and 1.5% of the account balance, with 1% being the most widely used standard among successful funded traders. This percentage should account for your stop loss placement and position size together. At 1% risk per trade, you can sustain 10 consecutive losing trades before hitting a 10% maximum drawdown, providing a substantial safety buffer. More conservative traders may use 0.5% risk, which allows 20 consecutive losses before a breach. Never risk more than 2% per trade on a prop firm account, as even a short losing streak at that level can quickly push you toward drawdown limits and create psychological pressure that leads to further mistakes.

How do I calculate maximum position size for my risk parameters?

Maximum position size is determined by dividing your dollar risk per trade by the distance to your stop loss in dollar terms per unit. For forex, the formula is: Position Size = (Account Size x Risk%) / (Stop Loss in Pips x Pip Value). For a $100,000 account risking 1% with a 50-pip stop on EUR/USD, the calculation is: $1,000 / (50 x $10 per pip for a standard lot) = 2 mini lots or 0.2 standard lots. This ensures your maximum loss on the trade equals exactly 1% of your account. Always calculate position size before entering a trade, never after. Some traders use lot size calculators or set up their trading platform to automatically calculate position sizes based on their stop loss distance and risk percentage.

How many open trades should I have simultaneously on a prop firm account?

Most risk management experts recommend limiting open trades to 2-4 positions simultaneously on a prop firm account. The key consideration is total portfolio exposure, not just the number of trades. Three trades each risking 1% create a total exposure of 3%, which on a bad day where all three hit stop loss would consume 3% of your drawdown allowance. Correlated trades are particularly dangerous because they tend to move in the same direction simultaneously. For example, being long on EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and AUD/USD simultaneously is essentially a single leveraged bet against the US dollar. Count correlated positions as a single trade for risk purposes and ensure your total portfolio exposure never exceeds your daily loss limit.

How do I protect against gap risk and overnight exposure?

Gap risk occurs when markets open at significantly different prices than they closed, jumping past your stop loss and creating losses larger than planned. To protect against gap risk on a prop firm account, avoid holding positions over weekends when forex markets are closed for 48 hours. Reduce position sizes before major economic events like Non-Farm Payrolls, central bank decisions, and CPI releases. Some traders close all positions 30 minutes before market close and avoid opening new positions during the last hour of trading. If you must hold overnight positions, reduce your position size to account for potential gaps and ensure that even a worst-case gap scenario would not breach your daily or total drawdown limits. Many prop firms explicitly recommend or require closing positions before major news events.

What is a risk-reward ratio and how does it relate to prop firm trading?

The risk-reward ratio compares the potential loss on a trade to the potential profit. A 1:2 risk-reward means you risk $1 to potentially make $2. For prop firm trading, maintaining a minimum 1:1.5 risk-reward ratio is generally recommended, with 1:2 or higher being ideal. This ratio directly impacts how many losing trades you can sustain while remaining profitable. With a 1:2 ratio, you only need to win 34% of your trades to break even. With a 1:1 ratio, you need to win more than 50% after accounting for spreads and commissions. Higher risk-reward ratios provide more room for losing streaks without significant drawdown. They also reduce the psychological pressure of needing a high win rate, allowing you to take only the highest quality setups.

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