📈 Prop Firm Guide
stocks + ETFs
Updated 2026-05-24
Trade The Pool Trading Journal
The most well-known stocks-focused prop firm. If you trade equities or ETFs (not futures or forex), this is one of very few real options.
Why TTP is harder than it looks
Most prop firms cater to futures/forex; TTP's rules are stock-specific. Buying power scales with account level, overnight holds are allowed but penalized, and the 'maximum loss per stock' rule blows up traders who concentrate.
Most traders approach a TTP challenge thinking skill is the constraint. It isn't. Rule-awareness under pressure is what decides whether you get funded. A single miscount on your trailing drawdown or a single moment of inattention on the daily loss limit ends the whole attempt — and the fee that came with it.
Rules · Account Mechanics
What you actually need to track
- Drawdown typeHard max loss per position + overall account max loss
- Daily loss limitYes — varies by account tier (Standard, Advanced, Pro)
- Profit targetEvaluation phase target varies — typically 6-8% of starting capital
- Consistency ruleYes — minimum number of profitable trading days required
- Minimum trading days30 days minimum on the funded account before first payout
- Scaling planYes — promotion path from Standard to Advanced to Pro tier with larger buying power
Promo tip: TTP runs occasional 30-40% off promos. Not as aggressive as futures firms, but stock-prop options are limited.
The 3 mistakes that end most TTP challenges
- Concentrating into one stock and tripping the max-loss-per-position rule. Diversification isn't optional here.
- Holding overnight without checking the overnight reduction in buying power. Many accounts get reduced by 50-75% overnight.
- Treating it like futures and ignoring the 30-day minimum trading days on funded. You can't get a payout in week 2 even if you're up huge.
"Prop firms aren't selling you capital — they're selling you a test of your discipline. The traders who pass TTP aren't the best strategists. They're the ones who never forget where their drawdown is."
How Journali's Prop Firm Mode solves this
Built for Trade The Pool specifically
Journali handles equity trades natively — tracks your buying power usage per position, your overnight exposure, and your TTP-specific consistency days. Auto-syncs from your broker so you're never reconciling manually.
Plus everything else you'd expect from a professional trading journal: unlimited trade logging, full analytics, equity curve, setup breakdown, emotion tracking, and optional AI coaching on Premier.
How long does it actually take to pass TTP?
The official minimum from Trade The Pool is 30 days minimum on the funded account before first payout. That's the floor — not the realistic timeline. In practice, traders who pass TTP evaluations on the first try fall into a fairly tight distribution:
- Top 10% of passers: 30-10 days. These traders had a defined, backtested strategy, sized conservatively, and didn't reach for the profit target.
- Median: 15-30 trading days. They tested the waters early, found their rhythm by week two, and let the consistency rule guide their sizing.
- Long tail (still passing): 60-90+ days. Trade The Pool doesn't punish slow traders — only rushed ones. If your firm has no time limit, taking your time dramatically improves your odds.
The traders who blow up are almost always trying to compress this timeline. They size up to hit the profit target inside the minimum days window, blow the drawdown on a normal pullback, and pay for another evaluation. The eval fee is cheap. The restart cost is expensive — both in money and in confidence.
The TTP payout timeline — when you actually see money
Passing the evaluation is step one. Getting paid is a separate process most traders underestimate. Here's how Trade The Pool payouts typically work in practice:
- First payout eligibility: Most firms require you to complete the minimum trading days on the funded account before requesting your first payout. For TTP, that's tied to 30 days minimum on the funded account before first payout.
- Processing time: Industry standard is 1-5 business days from request to receipt. Crypto payouts process faster (often same-day); wire transfers can take longer.
- Profit split: TTP pays out a percentage of profits — typically 80/20 in your favor on first payouts, scaling to 90/10 after consistency milestones. Always verify the exact split on your account tier.
- What kills payouts: Even a tiny rule break right before you request a payout can void the entire pending amount. The account stays open but the money you earned is gone. This is why passing and cashing out are two different problems.
The traders who consistently withdraw from TTP share a common discipline: they stop trading once they've earned what they came for. They request the payout, wait for it to clear, then start a new trading block. They don't try to keep grinding right up to the deadline.
The TTP evaluation strategy that actually works
There is no proprietary technique that makes a prop firm easier. What works is the same thing that works in any structured environment: a process that keeps you inside the rules without thinking about them. Here's the approach that gets the highest pass rate:
- Week 1: Size at 1/4 your normal risk. Your only job is to learn the rule mechanics under live conditions. Where does your buffer move when you take a partial? When does the daily loss reset? You're paying tuition to TTP either way — pay it as small losses, not blown accounts.
- Week 2-3: Scale to half size once the rules feel automatic. By this point you should know your buffer without checking. Your win rate matters less here than your worst trade size. The biggest single loss is what blows accounts, not the average loss.
- Week 3+: Trade at full normal risk only after consistency. Now you're trading your actual strategy. If you can't be profitable here at normal risk on your funded account, your real account is leaking too — the prop firm isn't the problem.
- Always: Stop at 50% of the profit target. The math: at 50% of target, you have enough room to absorb one bad day without trip-wiring drawdown. At 75% you don't. Take the slow path — TTP doesn't care if you take 8 weeks instead of 8 days.
Journali handles equity trades natively — tracks your buying power usage per position, your overnight exposure, and your TTP-specific consistency days. Auto-syncs from your broker so you're never reconciling manually. — which is why we built TTP support into Prop Firm Mode specifically. Track the rules in real time so you can focus on the trade, not the math.
How to set up a TTP account in Journali
- Sign up free — takes 30 seconds, no credit card required.
- Go to Settings → Prop Firm Mode — toggle on and select Trade The Pool as your firm.
- Enter your account size and starting balance — Journali auto-fills the rule set for TTP.
- Link SnapTrade (optional) — auto-syncs every trade from your broker so you never manually log again.
- Start trading — your daily loss buffer, trailing drawdown, and consistency ratio are now live on every trade.
Frequently asked questions
Does Journali's prop firm mode work with Trade The Pool?
Yes. Journali's Prop Firm Mode supports Trade The Pool's rule set including hard max loss per position + overall account max loss. You set it up once, and the dashboard tracks your buffer live on every trade.
Is there a free trial I can use while running a TTP challenge?
Journali's free plan includes 6 trades. If you're burning through a TTP evaluation, upgrade to Pro ($20/mo) for unlimited trades and Prop Firm Mode. Cancel anytime — no contract.
What's the #1 reason traders blow their TTP challenge?
Concentrating into one stock and tripping the max-loss-per-position rule. Diversification isn't optional here.
Can I track multiple TTP accounts in Journali?
Yes. Each account gets its own drawdown, daily loss, and consistency tracking. Perfect if you're stacking TTP accounts during a promo.
Can I lose more than the TTP evaluation fee?
No. Your downside is capped at what you paid for the evaluation (or the funded account purchase). Trade The Pool doesn't pull money from your personal account, and they don't bill you for losses on the funded account either — they just close it. Your worst case is the upfront cost.
How long does it typically take to pass a TTP evaluation?
The minimum is set by TTP's rules — 30 days minimum on the funded account before first payout. In practice, traders who pass average 15-30 trading days. Rushing the minimum window is the #1 reason traders bust — sizing up to hit the profit target quickly trips drawdown limits.
What happens if I bust my TTP account mid-payout?
If you trip any rule before the payout processes, you lose both the account and any pending payout. Trade The Pool's rules apply continuously — passing the eval doesn't make you safe. This is why Journali shows your live buffer on every trade, not just at end-of-day.
Can I run automated trading or copy trading on TTP?
Trade The Pool's policy varies — most prop firms allow automated trading as long as you own the strategy and aren't copying from a signal service. Always verify on Trade The Pool's official rules before deploying a bot. Journali tracks both manual and bot trades the same way for journaling and rule monitoring.
Also see
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Rules shown are current as of 2026-05-24 and may change. Always verify rules on Trade The Pool's official site before trading.