Would You Pass FTMO? Prop Firm Pass Calculator
Prop-firm evaluations like FTMO's give you a profit target to reach while staying inside a daily loss limit and an overall maximum loss, often with a minimum number of trading days. This tool runs a Monte-Carlo simulation of your trading assumptions against those rules and reports how often a simulated attempt would have met the target without breaching a limit.
The output is computed purely from the numbers you enter. It is an educational what-if, not a prediction of your real evaluation, and it is not affiliated with or endorsed by FTMO or any prop firm. The published FTMO rule values below are defaults you can change to match any firm or challenge.
How to use it
- Enter your win rate, R:R and risk per trade — your strategy assumptions.
- Set trades per day and the trading-day budget (how many days you give yourself).
- Enter the profit target, daily loss limit, overall max loss and minimum trading days from your firm's rules. The defaults shown are FTMO's published figures — always confirm against the firm's current terms.
The simulation plays out many attempts. Each day it applies your trades; if equity falls past the daily limit or overall max loss the attempt fails, and if it reaches the profit target after the minimum days it passes. The headline number is the share of attempts that passed under your inputs.
FAQ
Is this an official FTMO tool?
No. It is an independent educational calculator from Orion RFX and is not affiliated with or endorsed by FTMO or any prop firm. FTMO is named only to describe its publicly stated rules.
Are the default rule values accurate?
The defaults reflect FTMO's commonly published figures (10% target, 5% daily loss, 10% max loss, 4 minimum trading days), but firms change terms and run different account types. Verify the current rules before relying on them.
Does the result tell me my real chance of passing?
No. It models the inputs you provide and assumes a constant edge with independent trades. Your real attempt depends on execution, conditions, news and discipline. Treat the number as a what-if comparison only.
Why does it model a daily loss limit separately?
Most evaluations fail accounts intraday if a single day's loss exceeds the daily limit, even if total drawdown is fine — so the simulation checks each day, not just the end balance.
Is anything sent to a server?
No. It all runs in your browser.
See also the free trading tools hub and please read our risk disclosure.