Understanding common challenges and how to overcome them
Prop firm evaluations are designed to assess consistency, decision-making, and risk awareness. While many traders enter these programs with strong intentions, the evaluation phase can highlight areas that still need development.
Understanding common challenges can help you approach evaluations with clearer expectations and better preparation.
Only about 45% of traders pass evaluations on their first attempt. The key isn't luck it's preparation and awareness.
Some traders enter evaluations expecting quick results. When progress takes longer than anticipated, frustration can influence decisions.
Expecting to pass in 1 week vs. planning for 4-6 weeks of consistent trading
Fluctuating position sizing or emotional reactions to losses can disrupt consistency. Evaluations highlight whether risk control habits are stable.
Risking 2% after wins, 0.5% after losses → inconsistent results
Focusing too closely on daily outcomes can lead to reactive decision-making. Evaluations reward steady execution, not isolated gains.
The evaluation environment can introduce new emotional pressures. Traders without emotional awareness struggle to maintain consistency.
Feeling "this has to work" creates tension → leads to rule-breaking
"I'll pass in a week and start making $10k/month immediately"
"I'll focus on consistent execution for 4-6 weeks and learn from the process"
"One big win will get me to the target"
"Small, consistent gains build toward the target safely"
Risk the same percentage on every trade, every time
Stop after 2-3 losses to reset mentally
Know your absolute limit before starting
Same position sizing, same rules, always
Inconsistent: Risk 2% on first trade, 4% after loss to recover, 0.5% after win (emotional)
Consistent: Risk 1% on every trade, every day, regardless of recent outcomes
Checking P&L constantly, getting euphoric after wins, depressed after losses, changing strategy based on last trade.
Focus on process adherence. Ask: "Did I follow my rules perfectly?" not "How much did I make/lose?"
Journal your emotional state before and after each trade. Patterns emerge over time.
Emotion before trade: Did I follow rules anyway?
Challenges encountered during evaluations often point to specific areas for growth. Using this feedback constructively can support stronger preparation moving forward.
Your position sizing is too large or you're not respecting stops
You may be rushing or getting impatient near the target
You may not have a clear, repeatable trading plan
Psychology needs work - journal and review patterns
Every failed evaluation is data. What specifically went wrong? Use that information to improve for next time.
Not just to pass, but to become a consistently profitable trader