Profit splits & scaling
Profit splits by tier
On a funded account, profits are split between you and the firm. The split improves with tier, and the higher tiers keep more for the trader:
| Tier | Eval fee | Account size | Profit target | Max drawdown | Profit split (you / firm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Starter | $100 | $10,000 | 8% | 10% | 75 / 25 |
| Basic | $250 | $25,000 | 8% | 10% | 80 / 20 |
| Pro | $500 | $50,000 | 8% | 10% | 80 / 20 |
| Elite | $1,000 | $100,000 | 10% | 8% | 85 / 15 |
| Whale | $2,500 | $250,000 | 10% | 8% | 90 / 10 |
Your split is locked to your account when it's created, so later changes to the firm's tier configuration never retroactively change an open account.
The scaling ladder
Funded accounts grow as you stay profitable, reviewed on a monthly cycle:
- A profitable month → your account size grows +25%.
- Three consecutive profitable months → +50%.
- Six consistent months → your profit split improves by +5 percentage points, capped at 90 / 10.
So a Pro trader who strings together a long, clean run can grow a $50,000 account materially and improve their split over time, without paying for a higher tier.
Why the splits look like this
The split is how the firm earns on the traders who succeed, alongside the evaluation fees from those who don't. Keeping 75–90% with the trader is deliberately generous; the firm's edge is in the aggregate across many accounts, not in squeezing any one trader. The economics only hold if good traders are paid well enough to stay.