About List of Prop Firms

An independent directory of proprietary trading firms — quantitative, retail/funded, and futures-focused — built around publicly verifiable information.

Last reviewed on April 27, 2026

What this site is

List of Prop Firms is a directory of proprietary trading firms. The aim is simple: give traders and researchers a single place to scan the landscape of prop firms — institutional quant houses, retail evaluation programs, and futures-focused firms — without sifting through promotional material to figure out who is who.

The directory is content-only. It does not host trading accounts, route orders, or sell challenges. Listings are entries about publicly operating firms, not advertisements for them.

If you are choosing where to apply, evaluate, or trade, treat this site as a starting index. The authoritative source for any firm's current rules, fees, or status is always that firm's own site — the directory points to it; it does not replace it.

What it covers

Three overlapping segments of the proprietary trading industry are tracked:

  • Quantitative / institutional firms — companies that hire traders, researchers, and engineers as full-time employees and trade their own capital. Examples in this category include market makers and systematic investment firms.
  • Retail / funded prop firms — programs that let independent traders take an evaluation and, if they pass, trade a funded account in exchange for a profit share. Rules, evaluation structure, and payout cadence vary widely.
  • Futures prop firms — firms specialising in exchange-traded futures (typically CME Group products) using fixed or trailing drawdown models and platforms such as NinjaTrader or Tradovate.

Adjacent material — comparisons, a glossary, and longer explainers on evaluation models and drawdown rules — supports the directory rather than replacing it. See compare firms, the glossary, and the guides hub for those.

How content is produced

Each listing is built from publicly available sources: the firm's own website, third-party prop-firm aggregators including PropFirmMatch, Myfxbook, and Tradermath, and the firm's public profiles where available. Where two sources disagree, the firm's official site is treated as authoritative; if it is silent, the entry is left general rather than guessed.

Entries are written in-house, not generated from a single template. Fees, profit splits, and rule details are paraphrased rather than copied verbatim and are described at a level of generality that survives small changes — specific dollar figures and percentages reflect the time of writing and should be re-verified on the firm's site before any decision.

Entries are reviewed periodically. When a section has been re-checked, the visible "last reviewed" date on that page is updated. Reader-reported corrections are a major input — if something looks stale or wrong, please email it in.

Editorial approach

No paid placement
Inclusion in the directory is not for sale. Sponsorship of individual listings is not offered.
No affiliate links in listings
Outbound links to firm sites are plain links, not affiliate or referral codes.
Inclusion ≠ endorsement
A firm appearing here means it is publicly operating — not that it is recommended.
Verifiable over flashy
If a claim cannot be backed by a firm's own published material, it does not appear in the listing.
Generic where data is thin
When a firm publishes little, the description stays general rather than inventing detail.
Ads are clearly separated
Any display advertising is identifiable as such and never influences listing content.

Important — please read

Not financial advice. Nothing on this site is financial, investment, tax, or legal advice. Trading involves substantial risk and may not be suitable for every individual.

No endorsement. A firm being listed in the directory is not an endorsement, recommendation, or guarantee of legitimacy. Verify a firm's current rules and standing on its own site before engaging.

Information may be out of date. The prop trading industry changes quickly. Despite review cycles, individual entries can lag firm-level changes.

Your own diligence matters. Before sending money or trading, check payout history, terms of service, and any relevant regulatory status yourself. The red flags checklist is a useful starting point for that vetting.

Found something out of date?

Reader corrections are the most direct way to keep the directory accurate. A short email with a link beats a long form.

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