Daily Loss Limit is a risk management rule that sets the maximum amount a trader is allowed to lose in a single trading day. If losses reach this limit, the trader is no longer permitted to continue trading for that day. In many prop firms, exceeding the daily loss limit results in an immediate breach and account failure.
The daily loss limit is usually calculated as a fixed amount or a percentage of the account size or balance. It resets at the start of each new trading day based on the firm’s defined trading session.
Why Daily Loss Limit Matters in Prop Trading
The daily loss limit protects both the trader and the prop firm from excessive losses caused by emotional or uncontrolled trading. It prevents traders from attempting to recover losses through overtrading or oversized positions during a bad trading day.
Understanding how the daily loss limit is calculated helps traders manage risk more effectively. Traders who respect this limit tend to trade with more discipline and consistency. Ignoring it is one of the most common reasons traders fail challenges and lose funded accounts.
Example of a Daily Loss Limit
A trader has a 100000 account with a daily loss limit of 5000. If their closed trades and floating losses combine to reach 5000 in one day, they must stop trading. If the limit is exceeded, the account is considered breached even if the balance later recovers.