Propr Payout Calculator
Funded assumptions
Payout estimate
Preparing estimate...
Explorer 1-Step
- Balance
- 10,000 USDC
- Profit target
- 10%
- Daily loss limit
- 3%
- Max drawdown
- 6% static
- Time limit
- None
- Profit split
- 80%
Starter 1-Step
- Balance
- 5,000 USDC
- Profit target
- 10%
- Daily loss limit
- 3%
- Max drawdown
- 6% static
- Time limit
- None
- Profit split
- 80%
Bronze 1-Step
- Balance
- 25,000 USDC
- Profit target
- 10%
- Daily loss limit
- 3%
- Max drawdown
- 6% static
- Time limit
- None
- Profit split
- 80%
Silver 1-Step
- Balance
- 50,000 USDC
- Profit target
- 10%
- Daily loss limit
- 3%
- Max drawdown
- 6% static
- Time limit
- None
- Profit split
- 80%
Gold 1-Step
- Balance
- 100,000 USDC
- Profit target
- 10%
- Daily loss limit
- 3%
- Max drawdown
- 6% static
- Time limit
- None
- Profit split
- 80%
Use the Propr payout calculator to compare funded account withdrawal outcomes after passing a challenge. Adjust risk, win rate, payout target, and payout buffer to estimate payout chance and account-loss risk.
What is the Propr payout calculator?+
The Propr payout calculator is a funded account planning tool that estimates payout probability, average trader payout, account-loss chance, and time to payout.
How does the payout calculator work?+
The calculator simulates possible funded account trade paths using account size, loss limits, profit split, payout target, payout buffer, and your trading assumptions.
What assumptions does the calculator use?+
It uses win rate, average risk reward ratio, risk per trade as a percentage of account size, average trades per day, payout target, and payout buffer.
What does payout buffer mean?+
Payout buffer lowers the effective profit needed before a payout is considered reached. Increasing the buffer can raise payout probability and lower account-loss probability, but it also reduces payoutable profit.
Are payout estimates guaranteed?+
No. The results are planning estimates based on simulated trade paths. They do not guarantee a Propr payout or future trading performance.
How should I use the payout estimate?+
Use the estimate to compare account sizes, payout targets, and risk levels. Review it alongside pass probability to understand both the evaluation phase and the funded account phase.