Prop Firm Break-even Calculator Explained
1. One-line Summary
The Prop Firm Break-even Calculator helps traders calculate the exact amount of profit required to recover trading costs, challenge fees, spreads, commissions, and profit splits before they begin making real net income from a funded trading account.
2. Inputs
This calculator combines prop firm rules with real trading costs to determine your true break-even point. Here are all the required inputs and what they mean.
Prop Firm
The funded trading company you are using.
Different prop firms have different:
- Profit splits
- Profit targets
- Drawdown rules
- Evaluation fees
Example: FTMO
Account Size
The size of the funded account.
This affects:
- Percentage calculations
- Profit targets
- Fee impact
Example: $50,000
Challenge / Evaluation Fee
The upfront fee paid to attempt the prop firm challenge.
Even if refundable later, it is still a trading business expense that must be recovered.
Example: $299
Average Spread Cost per Trade
The estimated spread expense paid on each trade.
Spread cost depends on:
- Instrument traded
- Lot size
- Market conditions
The calculator hint uses:
\text{Spread Cost} = \text{Spread in Pips} \times $10 \times \text{Lot Size}
Example: $12 per trade
Average Commission per Trade
Broker commission charged for entering and exiting positions.
This is especially important for:
- Forex ECN accounts
- Futures trading
- Scalping systems
Example: $7
Average Swap per Trade
Overnight financing or rollover costs.
Usually applies when holding trades overnight.
Example: $0
Estimated Total Trades
The number of trades expected during the evaluation or payout cycle.
This determines total accumulated costs.
Example: 30 trades
Average Win per Winning Trade
The average gross profit from a successful trade.
Example: $200
Win Rate
The percentage of trades expected to win.
Example: 50%
3. Formula
The calculator uses several formulas to determine the true break-even level.
Step 1 — Total Trading Costs
The calculator first adds all trading expenses:
\text{Trading Costs} = (\text{Spread Cost} + \text{Commission Cost} + \text{Swap Cost}) \times \text{Trade Count}
Using example values:
- Spread cost = $12
- Commission = $7
- Swap = $0
- Trades = 30
Calculation:
[
(12 + 7 + 0) \times 30 = 570
]
Total trading costs = $570
Step 2 — Add Challenge Fee
[
\text{Total Costs} = \text{Trading Costs} + \text{Challenge Fee}
]
[
570 + 299 = 869
]
Total expenses = $869
Step 3 — Adjust for Profit Split
Since traders only receive a percentage of profits, the calculator adjusts for the prop firm payout split.
\text{Break-even} = \frac{\text{Total Costs}}{\text{Profit Split}}
If the prop firm split is 80%:
[
869 \div 0.80 = 1086.25
]
True break-even point = $1,086.25
This means the trader must generate over $1,086 before actually making net profit.
Step 4 — Break-even Percentage
\text{Break-even %} = \frac{\text{Break-even}}{\text{Account Size}} \times 100
For a $50,000 account:
[
(1086.25 \div 50000) \times 100 = 2.17%
]
Break-even requirement = 2.17%
4. Why It’s Useful
Understand Real Profitability
Many traders believe they are profitable while ignoring spreads, commissions, evaluation fees, and payout splits. This calculator reveals actual net profitability.
Prevent Unrealistic Expectations
A prop firm may advertise an 8% profit target, but your true target could effectively become 10% or more after accounting for costs.
Compare Prop Firms Properly
Two firms with identical account sizes can have very different real break-even levels because of:
- Different payout splits
- Different fees
- Different targets
This calculator helps traders compare funded account value objectively.
Improve Risk Management
Knowing your break-even threshold helps determine:
- Minimum acceptable risk/reward
- Required trade quality
- Necessary win rate
It becomes easier to avoid overtrading and low-quality setups.
5. Worked Scenario
A trader chooses:
- FTMO
- $50,000 account
- $299 challenge fee
- $12 spread cost
- $7 commission
- $0 swap
- 30 trades
- $200 average winning trade
- 50% win rate
- 80% profit split
Step 1 — Trading Costs
[
(12 + 7 + 0) \times 30 = 570
]
Trading costs = $570
Step 2 — Add Fee
[
570 + 299 = 869
]
Total costs = $869
Step 3 — Gross Profit Needed
[
869 \div 0.80 = 1086.25
]
Required gross profit = $1,086.25
Step 4 — Expected Gross Profit
Winning trades:
[
30 \times 0.50 = 15
]
Expected gross profit:
[
15 \times 200 = 3000
]
Expected gross = $3,000
Step 5 — Profit After Break-even
[
3000 – 1086.25 = 1913.75
]
After profit split:
[
1913.75 \times 0.80 = 1531
]
Estimated real trader profit = $1,531
Risk/Reward Check
Suppose the trader risks $100 per trade.
Average reward:
[
200 \div 100 = 2
]
Risk/reward ratio = 1:2
With a 50% win rate and 1:2 RR, the strategy remains mathematically strong even after trading expenses and prop firm fees.
This is exactly why break-even analysis matters — it filters out strategies that appear profitable before costs but fail after realistic trading expenses are included.
6. Connections
The Break-even Calculator works especially well alongside several other trading calculators.
Position Size Calculator
Helps determine safe lot sizes so traders avoid exceeding drawdown limits while pursuing break-even targets.
Risk/Reward Calculator
Used together to verify whether a strategy can realistically overcome trading costs and prop firm payout structures.
Win Rate Calculator
Helps traders understand the minimum win rate required to exceed the calculated break-even threshold.
Prop Firm Challenge Calculator
Allows traders to combine:
- Daily drawdown limits
- Profit targets
- Trading costs
- Expected payout structures
This creates a complete picture of challenge feasibility.
Forex Profit Calculator
Useful for estimating actual dollar returns from trades before plugging them into the break-even model.
A Prop Firm Break-even Calculator is one of the most important tools for funded traders because it converts “paper profitability” into real-world profitability. Instead of focusing only on winning trades, traders can evaluate whether their strategy truly produces meaningful net income after every hidden cost is accounted for.
