Let's get this out of the way: passing a prop firm challenge in one day is possible, but it's not the norm. Industry data suggests that roughly 4-10% of all evaluation accounts eventually pass, and the vast majority of those take days or weeks. A same-day pass requires a specific setup, disciplined execution, and a bit of market cooperation.
That said, the math is firmly on your side. A 50K account with a $3,000 profit target means you need to capture about 60 NQ points (on 1 contract) or 150 ES points — both entirely achievable in a single session if you catch the right move.
This guide isn't about gambling. It's about creating the conditions where one clean, well-managed trade sequence gets you across the line — and having the discipline to stop if those conditions don't appear.
This strategy involves concentrated risk. You are deliberately trying to hit a profit target in one session, which means your positions will be larger relative to your drawdown than a multi-day approach. Only attempt this if you are already a profitable trader with experience managing intraday risk. If you're new to futures, a slower approach is almost always better.
Not every prop firm allows you to pass in a single day. Some require minimum trading day counts. Here's the breakdown:
| Firm | Min Days | 1-Day Pass? | Drawdown Type | Max Accounts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apex | 1 day* | ✓ Yes* | Trailing | 20 |
| MFFU | No minimum | ✓ Yes | EOD | 5 |
| TakeProfitTrader | No minimum | ✓ Yes | Trailing (eval) | 5 |
| Tradeify (Growth) | 1 day | ✓ Yes | EOD | 5 |
| Tradeify (Select) | 3 days | ✗ No | EOD | 5 |
| Topstep | 2+ steps | ✗ No | EOD | 5 XFA |
*Apex standard eval requires 7 min trading days. During frequent "1-day pass" sales, the minimum drops to 1 day. Check current promotions.
Best firm for a 1-day pass: Apex Trader Funding. It's the cheapest evaluation (as low as $39.40 with 80% off), has no daily loss limit during eval, allows news trading, and you can stack up to 20 funded accounts. The trailing drawdown is the trade-off — but for a focused one-day attempt, it's manageable if you follow the framework below.
For a 1-day pass attempt, the account size matters more than you think. The key metric is the target-to-drawdown ratio — how much profit you need relative to how much you can lose.
The 50K account is the sweet spot. You need $3,000 in profit with $2,500 of drawdown room. That's approximately 60 NQ points on a single contract, or 15 NQ points on 4 contracts. The math works for a 1-day attempt without requiring a home run.
The 25K account is tempting because it's cheapest, but having your target equal your drawdown means one bad trade can eliminate you. The 100K and above accounts require larger absolute gains, making same-day passes less likely without taking excessive risk.
Here's the exact process. Each step is non-negotiable — skip one and you're gambling, not trading.
Before the market opens, check the economic calendar. You want a day with either: (a) a high-impact news release like FOMC, NFP, or CPI that will create volatility, or (b) a clean day with no news, where you can trade a technical setup.
Set these rules before you start and do not change them:
→ Max loss per trade: 30% of your drawdown ($750 on 50K)
→ Max trades: 2 attempts. If both stop out, you're done for the day.
→ Max contracts: Start with micros, scale to minis only when in profit
→ Stop trading at: 80% of target reached ($2,400 on 50K) — protect your gains
The biggest mistake traders make on 1-day attempts is forcing trades. You are not required to trade. Your evaluation doesn't expire today.
Wait for one of these high-probability setups:
→ Opening Range Breakout (ORB): First 15 minutes establish a range, trade the breakout direction
→ VWAP Reclaim/Rejection: Price tests VWAP, confirms direction, enter on pullback
→ News Spike Fade: After a big economic release, wait for the initial spike to exhaust, then fade it
→ Key Level Bounce: Previous day high/low, overnight high/low, or major support/resistance
If none of these appear by 11:00 AM ET, walk away. The market will be there tomorrow.
Never enter full size on your first entry. Use this scaling method:
→ Entry 1: 2-4 micro contracts (test the waters)
→ Confirmation: Price moves in your direction, holds key level
→ Entry 2: Add 2-4 more micros (or 1 mini) — now you have a real position
→ Stop loss: Below/above your setup level — hard stop, no mental stops
This approach means your initial risk is small. If the first entry fails, you've only lost a fraction of your max risk. If it works, you scale in with confirmation and have a strong average entry.
Once you're in profit, the goal shifts from "make money" to "don't give it back."
→ At +$500: Move stop to breakeven
→ At +$1,000: Take 1/3 off, trail stop to +$400
→ At +$2,000: Take another 1/3 off, trail stop to +$1,200
→ At +$2,400 (80% of target): Close everything. You're done.
Remember: on Apex, your drawdown trails from your highest unrealized equity. If you're up $2,000 and let it come back to $500, your drawdown has permanently tightened by $1,500. Taking partials protects against this.
If you've hit 80%+ of your target, close everything and shut down your platform. The most common way traders blow a 1-day pass attempt is giving back profits by overtrading after a great session.
If you're at $2,400 on a $3,000 target, you can easily finish the remaining $600 in the first 30 minutes of the next session. Don't risk a perfect day for an extra hour of screen time.
If your 2 trade attempts both failed, also stop. Your drawdown is reduced, and the remaining room is better used across multiple days rather than revenge trading.
| Instrument | Points for $3K (1 ct) | Avg Daily Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| MNQ (Micro NQ) | 1,500 pts ($2/pt) | ~300-500 pts | Scaling in with small risk |
| NQ (E-mini Nasdaq) | 150 pts ($20/pt) | ~300-500 pts | Fastest path if you're right |
| MES (Micro ES) | 600 pts ($5/pt) | ~60-100 pts | More predictable, lower volatility |
| ES (E-mini S&P) | 60 pts ($50/pt) | ~60-100 pts | Best risk/reward per contract |
Our recommendation: Start with MNQ micro contracts and scale up. NQ has enough daily range to hit $3,000 on even a modest 2-3 contract position if you catch a 50-80 point move — which happens almost every day during the opening hour.
Here's a realistic example of a 1-day pass on a 50K Apex account trading NQ:
This is not a fantasy scenario. NQ moves 300-500 points on most days. A 190-point rally in the first hour after the cash open is common. The key was patience (waiting 6 minutes for direction), scaling (starting with 4 MNQ, adding 4 more on confirmation), and disciplined exits (partials at planned levels).
Entering your max contract size on the first trade is the fastest way to blow your drawdown. If you're wrong, you've lost 40-60% of your room in one trade. Always scale in with micros first.
12-2 PM ET is called "the chop zone" for a reason. Low volume creates random, choppy price action that stops out most setups. If you haven't hit your target by 11 AM, take a break and come back at 2:30 PM or the next day.
Moving your stop further away after entry is the #1 emotional mistake. Your original stop was based on a level for a reason. If the level breaks, your thesis is invalidated — take the loss and wait for the next setup.
On Apex, if you're up $2,000 unrealized and let the trade come back to breakeven, your drawdown has permanently tightened from $2,500 to $500. Take partials and protect your open profit. This is the single most common reason Apex accounts fail.
You're up $2,200. Just $800 to go. You take a random trade, lose $600, now you need $1,400. You take another, lose again. Now you need $2,600 with only $1,100 of drawdown left. This spiral kills more same-day attempts than anything else. Set a stop point and honor it.
Here's the truth: a 3-day pass is almost always better than a 1-day pass. It gives you room to have one mediocre day and still hit your target. The pressure is lower, the risk per trade is smaller, and the math is more forgiving.
If you're treating this as a business (which you should), here's the smarter version of the same strategy:
Same $3,000 target, but instead of needing $3,000 in one session, you need an average of $1,000/day — which is just 50 NQ points on 1 contract. Infinitely more sustainable, and the same evaluation period (your monthly subscription covers unlimited days).
The 1-day framework above still applies to each day. The only difference is your daily target is smaller, so your position sizing is smaller, so your risk per trade is smaller. If you're new to prop firms, start with the 3-day approach and only attempt 1-day passes once you've successfully passed a few evaluations.
More resources: Challenge Cost Calculator · Which Prop Firm Fits You? (Quiz) · Apex Review · Compare All Firms