Dashboard Charts
The Dashboard includes two monthly charts that look similar but answer very different questions. The Monthly Net P&L Graph shows profitability. The Money In vs Money Out Chart shows gross cash movement. Reading them together tells you both whether you're profitable and how cash is actually flowing.
Monthly Net P&L Graph
A line chart of your Net Business P&L per month across the selected period.
What It Shows
Each point is that month's profitability, using the same formula as the headline KPI:
Per month: (Payouts + Income + Private Account P&L) − (Expenses + Challenge Costs − Refunds)
Sources: Funded Accounts (approved payouts), Transactions (income and expenses), Private Accounts (realized trading P&L), Challenges (challenge fees, upfront and subscription), refunds (challenge cost refunds)
Display: line chart with a Monthly view (default). Positive segments are green, negative segments muted red.
Use it to see whether your profitability is trending up, holding steady, or slipping month to month.
Money In vs Money Out Chart
A bar chart showing actual cash movement per month — money that arrived versus money that left. This is a gross cash-flow view, not a profitability view.
What It Shows
Money In (green bars): Payouts + Income + Private Account P&L + Refunds
Money Out (muted red bars): Expenses + Challenge Costs
Display: side-by-side bars per month, green for in and muted red for out, with months on the x-axis and dollar amounts on the y-axis.
The One Place Refunds Count as Money In
This chart is the only place on the Dashboard where refunds are treated as money in rather than as a cost reduction. The reason is simple: this view is about cash direction, and a refund is literal cash arriving in your account. Everywhere else (Net Business P&L, Total Expenses, Sustainability), refunds reduce costs.
How It Differs from the Net P&L Graph
The Net P&L graph answers "did I make money this month?" This chart answers "how much cash moved this month?" A month can show large bars in both directions while landing near break-even on Net Business P&L. For profitability, read the Net P&L graph; for cash flow, read this one.
Next: The Yearly P&L Calendar →