When I first got into prop trading, I went in thinking I had a decent handle on things. I had read a bunch of articles, watched a handful of YouTube breakdowns, and felt like I understood the basics well enough to get started.
Turns out, understanding the basics and actually navigating your first few months are two very different things. I made a handful of mistakes early on that cost me money, time, and a fair amount of frustration. Looking back, most of them were avoidable.
Mistake One: Jumping Into a Challenge Too Quickly
My first mistake was signing up for an evaluation before I really understood the rules of that specific firm. Every prop firm has slightly different drawdown limits, profit targets, and time restrictions, and I assumed they were all basically the same.
They are not. I failed my first challenge within a week because I didn’t realize the firm I picked had a strict daily loss limit that was much tighter than what I was used to trading with.
If I had spent even 30 minutes reading through the rules carefully before paying for the evaluation, I probably would have picked a different firm or adjusted my trading style from day one.
Mistake Two: Paying Full Price Without Checking for Discounts
This one stings a little to admit. My first evaluation fee was just under $200, and I paid full price without thinking twice about it.
A few weeks later, a friend mentioned he had used a discount code to knock almost 30 percent off the same evaluation at a different firm. That was money I basically threw away out of pure laziness.
Now before signing up for any evaluation, I check ForexCoupons first to see if there’s an active code for that firm. Sometimes there isn’t anything useful, but often there’s a discount of 10 to 40 percent, which on a $200 or $300 fee is not small change.
Mistake Three: Treating the Evaluation Like the Hard Part
I went into my evaluation thinking that once I passed, the hard part was over. In reality, the evaluation phase is often easier than trading a funded account, mostly because the pressure is different.
Once you’re funded, there’s a sense of “real money” attached to every trade, even though it’s the firm’s capital and not yours. That mental shift caught me off guard, and I ended up trading more cautiously than I needed to, which actually hurt my performance.
Looking back, I should have mentally prepared for the funded phase just as much as I prepared for passing the evaluation itself.
Mistake Four: Not Treating It Like an Actual Side Hustle
For the first couple of months, I treated prop trading kind of casually. No real schedule, no consistent routine, just trading whenever I felt like it.
That approach doesn’t really work well with funded accounts, since consistency matters a lot for both passing evaluations and maintaining a funded account long term. Once I started treating my trading sessions with the same structure I’d give to any other side hustle, things improved noticeably.
This shift in mindset reminded me a lot of how side hustles aren’t just about the money, they’re also about building habits and routines that make the effort sustainable over time. Trading is no different in that sense.
Mistake Five: Not Separating Trading Money From Everything Else
My last big mistake was mixing my trading-related expenses, like evaluation fees and resets, in with my regular spending. It made it hard to actually see whether prop trading was worth it financially.
Once I started tracking evaluation costs, resets, and payouts separately, the picture became a lot clearer. Some months I was barely breaking even after factoring in failed challenges and reset fees. Other months were genuinely profitable.
This is honestly the same lesson that applies to managing income from any side hustle. Knowing exactly where money is coming in and going out matters a lot, something that lines up with how side hustlers manage their money in general, not just in trading.
What I’d Tell Someone Just Starting Out
If I could go back and give myself advice before starting, it would be pretty simple. Read the rules of each firm carefully before paying anything. Always check for discount codes before signing up for an evaluation, since that money adds up fast over multiple attempts. Treat the whole thing like a real side hustle with a schedule, not something you do whenever you feel like it. And keep your trading-related costs separate so you actually know if it’s working.
None of these mistakes were disasters on their own, but together they slowed down my progress more than they needed to. Funded trading can be a legitimate side hustle, but only if you approach it with a bit more structure than I did at the start.

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