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How Prop Firm Scaling Plans Work — Growing Your Size as You Grow the Account

June 22, 2026

Many prop firms do not let you trade your full contract allowance from day one. Instead they tie your maximum position size to how much profit you have built — a scaling plan. New funded traders often bust accounts not by losing money, but by accidentally trading more contracts than their current account profit permits.

This is a general explanation of how scaling plans work, why firms use them, and how to plan your trading so you do not trip a contract limit. The exact thresholds vary by firm and account, so confirm the numbers in your own account's rules — this covers the mechanics that are common across firms.

What a scaling plan is

A scaling plan ties your maximum allowed contract size to your account balance or accumulated profit. Early on, when your account is near its starting balance, you can only trade a fraction of the account's headline contract limit. As your profit grows past defined thresholds, your permitted size steps up toward the full limit.

The idea is a ladder: at low profit you trade small, and each profit milestone unlocks a larger maximum position. Some firms apply scaling only during the evaluation, some only on funded accounts, and some on both — so read which phase your plan applies to.

Why firms use scaling

Scaling protects the firm and the trader from oversized risk before a cushion exists. A trader who maxes out contracts on day one with no profit buffer can wipe the account on a single bad trade. Forcing size to grow with profit means losses early on are smaller relative to the drawdown room.

It also encourages the steady, consistent trading that firms want to fund. A trader who builds profit gradually and scales up earns the right to bigger size, which aligns the trader's incentives with surviving long enough to be profitable rather than swinging for the fences immediately.

How traders accidentally break scaling rules

The classic mistake is trading the account's headline maximum size when your current profit only permits a fraction of it. If your account advertises, say, ten contracts but your scaling tier currently allows three, taking a five-contract position can violate the rule even if the account has plenty of drawdown room left.

A subtler version: scaling tiers can move with your balance, so a position that was allowed when you were up can become non-compliant after a drawdown drops you to a lower tier. You have to know your current tier, not the tier you were in an hour ago.

Planning around your scaling tier

Build your trading plan around your current permitted size, not the account's headline number. Know which profit threshold unlocks the next tier, and treat reaching it as a milestone rather than rushing your size up before you have the buffer to justify it.

Tracking this alongside your drawdown is the cleanest way to stay compliant. FundedNotes shows account profit and distance to drawdown together, so you can see where you sit relative to the next scaling threshold and avoid trading a size your current tier does not allow — particularly useful across multiple accounts each on their own tier.

Frequently asked questions

What is a prop firm scaling plan?

A scaling plan ties your maximum allowed contract size to your accumulated profit or account balance. You start trading a fraction of the account's headline contract limit and unlock larger size as your profit passes defined thresholds.

Why do prop firms limit my contract size when I start?

To prevent oversized risk before you have built a profit cushion. Forcing size to grow with profit keeps early losses small relative to your drawdown room and rewards the steady, consistent trading firms prefer to fund.

Can I drop back to a lower scaling tier?

Yes — on many plans the tier moves with your balance, so a drawdown can push you to a lower tier where your previous position size is no longer allowed. Always trade to your current permitted size, not the size you were allowed before a loss.

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