FTMO reports that less than 10% of traders pass their Phase 1 Challenge. The reason most of the other 90% fail is not a bad strategy. It is poor discipline, emotional decisions, and failing to track the rules that govern the account. Those are fixable — if you know what to fix and you have the tools to hold yourself accountable.
This guide covers the 10 most effective FTMO Challenge tips for 2026 — the ones that actually move the needle on pass rate. Apply even four or five of them and your probability of passing improves meaningfully.
Tip 1: Know Your Daily Loss Limit Like Your Own Name
FTMO's daily loss limit is 5% of your account balance. On a $100K account, that is $5,000. It resets every day at midnight Prague time (CET). It is measured on equity, not closed P&L — an open position drawing down $3,000 counts toward the limit even if you have not yet closed it.
The mistake: Not tracking running daily equity P&L in real time. You check your closed trades, you feel safe, and then an open position blows through the limit before you can react.
The fix: Use TMI to see your daily equity drawdown as a percentage of your limit at all times. Set personal alerts at 50%, 70%, and 85%. The alert is the brake pedal. For a full breakdown of drawdown mechanics, read Prop Firm Drawdown Management.
Tip 2: Trade Your Normal Lot Sizes
Do not oversize to hit the profit target faster. FTMO's 10% Phase 1 profit target is $10,000 on a $100K account over 30 days. That is $333 per day. Very achievable with normal sizing and a 0.5-1% risk per trade.
The mistake: Seeing the profit target as a sprint. You size up in Week 1, hit a losing sequence, and blow through your drawdown ceiling by Wednesday.
The fix: Use a fixed lot size formula — `Lot size = (Account balance × Risk%) ÷ (Stop loss in pips × Pip value)`. Never size by feel. Never size based on recent performance.
Tip 3: Take at Least 4 Trading Days — But Pace Across 10-15
FTMO requires a minimum of 4 trading days. Hitting exactly 4 is a red flag — it suggests you are rushing. Pace yourself across 10-15 trading days to reduce variance.
The math is simple: a 40% win rate over 4 trades has a 13% chance of zero winners. Over 15 trades, the chance of a disastrous run collapses. Time is your friend in the Challenge — as long as you stay within the 30 calendar day window.
Tip 4: Stick to 1-2 Instruments Maximum
TMI data shows traders who focus on 1-2 instruments have a 42% higher pass rate than those trading 5+ instruments. The reason is straightforward: specialization creates edge. Breadth creates noise.
Pick your focus:
Log every trade in your focus instrument. After 30 trades you will know whether you actually have an edge on it.
Tip 5: Stop After 3 Consecutive Losses
Three consecutive losses in a day is a signal. The signal is that something about the market structure today, your mental state today, or your setup identification today is off. Set a hard rule: three losses, stop for the day.
This single rule prevents the revenge spiral that causes approximately 40% of all daily limit breaches. For the full psychology behind the revenge trading pattern, read How to Stop Revenge Trading.
Tip 6: Use a 15-Minute Post-Loss Rule
After any losing trade, do not enter another trade for 15 minutes. Set a timer. Walk away from the screen. Your cortisol levels need 12-15 minutes to normalize before you can assess setups rationally.
The neuroscience here is not soft — post-loss cortisol measurably impairs prefrontal cortex function. You are, literally, not thinking clearly in the window after a loss. Trading through that window is where most revenge trades live.
Tip 7: Track Your Rule Violations
Create your personal trading rules before the Challenge starts. Track every violation with TMI's Rule Tracker. At the end of each week, review them — not the P&L, the violations.
Minimum rules for an FTMO Challenge:
A rule you cannot measure is a rule you will not follow. A rule you measure weekly is a rule that shapes behavior.
Tip 8: Review Your Performance Weekly
Every Sunday, spend 20-30 minutes reviewing: which setups worked, which sessions carried you, where you violated rules. TMI generates most of this automatically in its weekly AI debrief — your job is to read it and adjust one thing for the week ahead.
The trap: obsessively reviewing every day and tinkering constantly. The discipline: weekly review cycles only. Daily tinkering is emotional reaction dressed up as analysis.
Tip 9: Journal Every Trade, Not Just Losers
Most traders journal their bad trades (or skip them because they are uncomfortable) and do not capture the good ones. This is backwards. Your winners contain the pattern you want to repeat. Your losers contain the pattern you want to avoid. You need both.
TMI's auto-sync via MetaApi removes the option to selectively journal — every trade lands in your journal within seconds of execution. For the full walkthrough, read How to Journal Your FTMO Challenge.
Tip 10: Never Trade Just to "Check the Box"
FTMO requires 4 minimum trading days. Traders who obsess over this requirement start taking trades that do not exist — forcing setups in flat markets just to meet the count. This is how disciplined traders fail Challenges they were comfortably passing.
The rule: if your setups are not there, skip the session. A no-trade day is better than a forced-trade day. The minimum trading day requirement is designed to prevent people from hitting the target on one lucky trade — it is not a quota that demands entries on thin sessions.
The FTMO Challenge Checklist
Use this before every Challenge phase:
The Real Edge in 2026
FTMO Challenge pass rates have not improved meaningfully in five years. The firms get better, the challenges tighten, and the traders who pass are the ones who treat the Challenge as a discipline problem rather than a strategy problem.
Strategy is a prerequisite. Discipline is the differentiator. And discipline, in 2026, is built on data — your personal data, tracked by tools that surface your behavioral patterns before they cost you an account.
For common funded trader mistakes to avoid after you pass, read Funded Trader Mistakes to Avoid.