aking a month (or more) to pass Phase 1 isn’t necessarily a bad thing—but if it’s frustrating you or you keep running close to time limits, it usually points to a few specific issues. Let’s break it down.
Why Phase 1 Is Taking You So Long
1. You’re Risking Too Little Per Trade
This is the most common reason.
If your target is 8–10% and you’re risking 0.25–0.5% per trade with a 1:2 RR, the math simply doesn’t work fast:
| Risk Per Trade | RR | Profit Per Win | Wins Needed for 8% (approx.) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.25% | 1:2 | 0.5% | ~16 net wins |
| 0.5% | 1:2 | 1% | ~8 net wins |
| 1% | 1:2 | 2% | ~4 net wins |
| 1% | 1:3 | 3% | ~3 net wins |
If you’re trading scared with tiny risk, you’ll need a huge number of clean wins—and that takes weeks.
2. You’re Overly Cautious After Losses
Many traders take 2–3 losses, then:
- Reduce lot size drastically
- Skip valid setups
- Sit out for days
This “fear mode” stretches the challenge timeline massively. One bad week followed by a defensive week = half a month gone with near-zero progress.
3. You’re Cutting Winners Early (Sound Familiar?)
This connects directly to the losers-long-winners-fast problem. If your average winner is 0.5% and your average loser is 0.5%, you’re on a treadmill. You need asymmetric outcomes to hit the target efficiently.
4. You’re Trading Too Few Setups
Some traders go the opposite direction—so selective that they take 2–3 trades a week. That’s fine for a personal account, but with a profit target and (sometimes) a time limit, low frequency + low risk = slow grind.
5. Giving Back Profits Mid-Challenge
You get to +5%, then a losing streak drags you back to +1%. This “two steps forward, one step back” cycle is usually caused by:
- Increasing risk after wins (overconfidence)
- Revenge trading after a red day
- Trading outside your plan once you’re “close”
How to Fix It
Fix 1: Calculate Your Path Before You Start
Do the math upfront:
- Target: 8%
- Risk per trade: 1%
- RR: 1:2 minimum
- Realistic win rate: 45–50%
That means roughly 8–12 trades could get you there. Suddenly the challenge looks like a 2-week project, not a monthly grind.
Fix 2: Use Fixed, Meaningful Risk
Pick a consistent risk—0.75% to 1% is the sweet spot for most challenges. It’s:
- Big enough to make real progress
- Small enough that 4–5 losses won’t breach your daily drawdown
Don’t shrink it after losses. Don’t inflate it after wins. Consistency is the whole game.
Fix 3: Protect Your Progress With Milestones
Break the target into checkpoints:
- At +3%: reduce risk slightly or tighten setup criteria
- At +6%: only take A+ setups
- At +7.5%: consider risking only from profits
This prevents the classic “was at +6%, now back to +1%” heartbreak.
Fix 4: Respect the Daily Drawdown Above Everything
Most challenge failures aren’t from the overall drawdown—they’re from the daily limit. Set a personal rule:
- Max 2 losses per day, then stop
- Never risk more than 40–50% of your daily drawdown in one session
Surviving is what lets you pass. You can’t hit a target from a blown account.
Fix 5: Stop Treating It Like a Sprint on Green Days
The paradox: traders go slow when losing and fast when winning—the opposite of what works. After a green day, don’t add “bonus trades.” Bank the progress and come back tomorrow.
The Honest Reframe
Here’s the thing though: one month to pass Phase 1 is not actually a failure. Most reputable prop firms have removed time limits precisely because rushing destroys traders. The people who pass in 3 days are often the same people who blow the funded account in week two, because they passed on aggression, not skill.
The real question isn’t “how do I pass faster?” It’s:
“Am I trading a system that would be profitable on a real account?”
If yes—the pass happens naturally, whether it takes 2 weeks or 5.
If no—passing faster just gets you to a funded account you’ll lose.
Quick Checklist
- Risk 0.75–1% per trade, consistently
- Minimum 1:2 RR on every setup
- Max 2 losses per day, then walk away
- Don’t shrink risk after losses out of fear
- Don’t add trades after big green days
- Protect profits with milestone rules
- Journal every trade to spot where time is leaking
Fix the risk sizing and the fear-driven inconsistency, and you’ll likely find Phase 1 compresses from a month to 2–3 weeks—without trading any differently in terms of strategy.