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MyFundedFutures Profit Target: How to Hit $3,000 Without Blowing Up (2026)

Paul from PropTradingVibes
Written by Paul
Published on
March 6, 2026
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Table of contents

Quick Answer β€” MFFU Profit Target

  • β€’ As of March 2026, MyFundedFutures requires a 6% profit target on all plans: $3,000 on $50K, $6,000 on $100K, and $9,000 on $150K accounts.
  • β€’ There is no time limit on MFFU evaluations β€” minimum 2 trading sessions, no maximum day count.
  • β€’ The 50% consistency rule means no single day can represent more than 50% of total cumulative profit at evaluation end β€” so a $1,500 day only flies if total profit is $3,000+.
  • β€’ The target is calculated from the starting account balance, not from the current balance β€” hitting $3,000 total profit clears it regardless of intraday fluctuations along the way.
  • β€’ Watch-out: sizing up to "get done quickly" is the single most common reason traders breach the drawdown before reaching the target β€” the eval has no expiry, so patience is free.

MyFundedFutures requires a 6% profit target to pass evaluation on all plans. On a $50K account, that's $3,000. On $100K, it's $6,000. On $150K, it's $9,000.

There's no time limit β€” minimum 2 trading sessions, no maximum. That means you can take 30 days if you need to. Most traders who blow evals don't run out of time. They run out of drawdown trying to hit the target too fast.

Paul from PropTradingVibes

Learned the hard way: I've been trading MyFundedFutures for over two years β€” passed somewhere between 15 and 20 evaluations, pulled out more than $20K, and broken enough rules along the way to know exactly which ones trip traders up. This is based on live experience across multiple account sizes, not help docs.

The MFFU rules changed significantly in July 2025 when they replaced Starter/Expert with Core, Rapid, and Pro plans β€” drawdown types differ per plan. I broke down every rule that matters in my complete MFFU rules overview. For the absolute latest, check MyFundedFutures' website or their help center.

What Is the Profit Target at MyFundedFutures?

The profit target at MyFundedFutures is exactly 6% of the starting account balance, applied uniformly across all plans (Core, Rapid, and Pro) and all account sizes. As of March 2026:

Account Size Profit Target Max Single Day (50% rule) Plans Available
$50,000 $3,000 $1,499 (49.9%) Core, Rapid, Pro
$100,000 $6,000 $2,999 (49.9%) Rapid, Pro
$150,000 $9,000 $4,499 (49.9%) Rapid, Pro

The "max single day" column shows the practical ceiling β€” if you earn this amount or less in one day, you'll never trigger the 50% consistency rule at target, provided the remaining profit comes across multiple days. Earn even $1 more, and you need total profits to scale accordingly.

The $50K account is only available on Core, Rapid, and Pro. $100K and $150K are Rapid and Pro only.

How the Profit Target Interacts With the Consistency Rule

This is where most people get confused, and it genuinely matters.

The 50% evaluation consistency rule doesn't cap your daily earnings in real-time. It's a backward-looking calculation applied at the end of your evaluation. But it effectively creates a practical daily ceiling based on your total profit position.

Here's the scenario that catches traders:

Day 1 of a $50K eval: you have a great session. Up $1,800. Your best day is now 100% of total profit. You're not in violation β€” you're just getting started.

Day 2: up $700. Total profit $2,500. Best day ($1,800) = 72% of total. Still over 50% β€” can't pass yet.

Day 3: up $600. Total profit $3,100. Target hit. But best day ($1,800) = 58.1% of total. Still can't pass.

Day 4: up $400. Total profit $3,500. Best day = 51.4%. Still over.

Day 5: up $200. Total profit $3,700. Best day = 48.6%. Under 50%. Now you can pass.

That $1,800 day on Day 1 forced you to earn $700 beyond the profit target just to satisfy the consistency rule. You weren't in trouble β€” but you weren't done when you thought you were.

The Practical Implication

If you're targeting $3,000 on a $50K account, never let a single day exceed $1,400 while your total is still below $3,000. That keeps any one day under 50% of even the minimum passing threshold.

$1,400 / $3,000 = 46.7%. Safe.

$1,500 / $3,000 = 50%. Exactly at the limit β€” risky because one more cent of profit on that day makes it 50.0001%.

I use $1,200 as my mental cap on any single eval session. That's 40% of the $3,000 target. It keeps me well inside the consistency rule and forces me to build the account steadily.

How Long Does It Take to Hit the Profit Target?

No time limit means the pace is entirely up to you. Here's what realistic timelines look like at different daily targets:

Daily Target Days to $3K (approx) Consistency Rule Risk
$300/day 10+ days Minimal β€” 10% of total
$500/day 6–8 days Low β€” 16% of total
$600/day 5–6 days Low β€” 20% of total
$1,000/day 3–4 days Moderate β€” 33% of total
$1,500/day 2–3 days High β€” approaches 50% limit

The $600/day path is what I use on $50K evals when I'm being disciplined. It takes 5–6 trading days, keeps me well inside the consistency rule, and doesn't require anything heroic sizing-wise. On ES, $600/day at 1–2 contracts is 6–12 points of net profit. That's a realistic daily target.

Why Traders Blow Evals Chasing the Profit Target

The most common failure pattern I see: trader is on day 3 of an eval, up $1,400, needs $1,600 more to pass. They decide to size up β€” 3 or 4 contracts instead of 1 β€” to get it done today.

One bad 20-point NQ move. At 3 contracts, that's $1,800. Account balance goes from $51,400 to $49,600. The EOD drawdown floor was set at $49,952 on the prior session's high. Breach.

The eval had no expiry. There was no urgency. The trader created urgency artificially and paid for it.

I've done this. Not proud of it, but I've done it. The mental pressure of being close to a target makes you do stupid things with position size.

The structural solution: decide your maximum contract count before the eval starts and don't deviate. On a $50K Core eval, I never go above 2 ES contracts until I'm funded. That caps my upside per session, but it also caps my disaster potential. The eval has no clock β€” my patience has infinite value.

What Happens After You Hit the Target?

Once your cumulative realized profit hits 6% of starting balance and the consistency rule is satisfied, the evaluation closes and you move to the funded account.

You don't need to close positions or do anything special. The platform recognizes the conditions are met. Processing times vary, but most traders get funded within 1–2 business days of completing the evaluation.

Profit Target vs Drawdown: The Real Risk Balance

The profit target and the drawdown floor create the fundamental tension in every MFFU evaluation. You need to earn $3,000 while never letting your account touch the floor.

On a $50K Core account:

  • Starting floor: $48,500 (3% below $50,000)
  • Starting buffer: $1,500
  • Profit needed: $3,000

You need to earn twice your starting buffer without ever touching it. That's not trivial.

The buffer grows as you profit. After earning $1,000 (account at $51,000), your floor is at $49,470. Buffer: $1,530. Slightly more room, but not much.

After $2,000 in profit ($52,000 balance), floor is $50,440. Buffer: $1,560. Still relatively tight.

The floor trails you up. Every dollar of profit moves the ceiling (your balance) up and moves the floor up by 97 cents. The net gain in buffer per dollar of profit is only 3 cents.

What this means practically: a good day doesn't dramatically increase your safety margin. You need to be disciplined about drawdown throughout the evaluation, not just at the start.

My Strategy for Passing MFFU Evaluations

After multiple evals, here's what I actually do:

Target $500–$600 per session on a $50K eval. That pace hits $3,000 in 5–6 trading days and keeps the consistency rule satisfied automatically.

Trade 1 ES contract with a 10-point stop ($500 risk). That's one-third of my starting buffer per trade. I take 2–3 trades per session, targeting 5–8 points each.

I stop trading when I'm up $400 for the day. Not because I couldn't make more β€” because I don't need to. The goal isn't to maximize each session. The goal is to pass the evaluation.

On losing days, I stop at -$300 (20% of starting buffer). Not because I'm required to β€” MFFU has no daily loss limit β€” but because trading through a losing day with more size is how accounts get blown.

The bottom line: MFFU's $3,000 profit target on a $50K account is achievable for any trader who can net 6 consistent points on ES per day. The consistency rule makes it slightly more complex than a pure dollar target. The drawdown makes aggressive sizing lethal. Take the boring, systematic path. It works.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the profit target on MFFU?

MyFundedFutures requires a 6% profit target to pass evaluation on all plans. As of March 2026, that equals $3,000 on a $50K account, $6,000 on a $100K account, and $9,000 on a $150K account.

How long do I have to hit the profit target at MFFU?

MyFundedFutures evaluations have no maximum time limit. You must complete a minimum of 2 trading sessions, but there is no day cap. You can take 30, 60, or 90 days if needed β€” the evaluation stays open until you pass or breach the drawdown.

Does the MFFU profit target interact with the consistency rule?

Yes. MyFundedFutures enforces a 50% consistency rule that prevents any single day's profit from exceeding 50% of total cumulative profit at evaluation end. This means you may hit the 6% profit target in dollar terms but still be unable to pass if one day dominates your total profit history.

Is the MFFU profit target the same on all plans?

Yes. MyFundedFutures applies the same 6% profit target across Core, Rapid, and Pro plans. The difference between plans is in drawdown type, profit split, payout structure, and funded consistency rules β€” not in the evaluation profit target itself.

What counts toward the profit target at MFFU?

Only realized (closed) profit counts toward the MyFundedFutures profit target. Unrealized gains from open positions do not count. Your account balance at end of day, reflecting closed trades, is what determines progress toward the $3,000 / $6,000 / $9,000 target.

Can I pass the MFFU evaluation in one day?

Technically, yes β€” the minimum requirement is 2 trading sessions. But practically, hitting $3,000 in two sessions while staying inside the 50% consistency rule means no single session can exceed $1,499. On a $50K account with a $1,500 starting buffer, that creates extreme risk. MyFundedFutures does not prohibit it, but most traders who attempt fast passes blow their drawdown in the process.

What happens after I hit the profit target at MFFU?

Once your cumulative realized profit reaches the 6% target and the 50% consistency rule is satisfied, MyFundedFutures processes your evaluation as passed. Funded account setup typically takes 1–2 business days. Your funded account starts with fresh drawdown calculations from the new starting balance.

What is a realistic daily profit goal for a MFFU $50K evaluation?

On a $50K MyFundedFutures evaluation, targeting $400–$600 per day is sustainable and keeps you inside the consistency rule without aggressive sizing. At $500/day, you reach $3,000 in 6 trading sessions. That pace requires roughly 5–6 points of net profit on 1–2 ES contracts, or equivalent in other CME instruments.

Does the profit target reset if I lose money early in the evaluation?

No. MyFundedFutures' profit target is measured as cumulative realized profit from the start of the evaluation. If you're down $500 early in the eval, you need to earn $3,500 total (not just $3,000 from your current position) to hit the 6% target on a $50K account.

How does MFFU's profit target compare to other futures prop firms?

The 6% profit target at MyFundedFutures is on the higher end compared to some competitors. TakeProfitTrader requires 6% as well. Some firms like Topstep use a fixed dollar target rather than a percentage. The combination of MFFU's 6% target with a trailing drawdown and consistency rule creates a more complex evaluation than firms with simpler structures, but the unlimited time limit compensates significantly.