Challenge Costs vs. Expenses
Money flows out of your trading business in two main categories: challenge costs and general expenses. Understanding the distinction helps with analysis and reporting.
The Two Types of "Money Out"
Challenge Costs
What it is: Money spent on prop firm evaluations
Source: Challenges module
Examples:
FTMO 100K challenge purchase: $500
MyFundedFX evaluation fee: $300
Challenge subscription renewal: $100
Key characteristic: Direct investment in trying to get funded
Expenses
What it is: General business operating costs
Source: Transactions module
Examples:
TradingView subscription: $30/month
VPS hosting: $50/month
Trading course: $500
Coaching session: $200
Key characteristic: Costs of running your trading business (not specific to prop firm entry)
Why Separate Them?
Different Strategic Purposes
Challenge costs are investments in potential funded accounts. You spend money hoping to pass and receive a funded account that generates payouts.
Expenses are operational costs. You'd pay these whether or not you're doing prop firm challenges—they're the cost of being a trader.
Different Decision Making
Challenge costs: "Should I buy another challenge? What's my pass rate? Is this a good ROI?"
Expenses: "Is this tool worth the cost? Can I cut any expenses?"
Separating them helps you analyze each independently.
Different Trends
You might see:
Challenge costs decreasing (fewer failed attempts)
Expenses stable (same tools and subscriptions)
Or:
Challenge costs increasing (trying more firms)
Expenses increasing (adding more tools)
Separating reveals these patterns.
How They Appear
On Dashboard
Both contribute to "Money Out":
Total Money Out: $5,000 ├─ Challenge Costs: $3,000 └─ Expenses: $2,000 In Reports
The Expense Report separates them:
Challenge Costs section
Tools & Software section
Education section
Other expenses
In KPI Cards
The Dashboard may have a dedicated "Challenge Costs" KPI card, showing this major expense category separately.
Challenge Cost Tracking
Challenge costs have special characteristics:
Linked to Specific Challenges
Each cost is tied to a particular challenge record. You can see the cost, outcome, and whether it converted to a funded account.
Refunds Reduce Net Cost
When you pass and receive a refund, your net cost for that challenge decreases. The platform tracks:
Original cost
Refunds received
Net cost
ROI Analysis
You can calculate: "I spent $5,000 on challenges and received $20,000 in payouts. That's a 4x return."
Expense Tracking
General expenses are broader:
Categories
Expenses are organized by type:
Tools & Software
Education & Coaching
Data & Research
Hardware
Other
Recurring Nature
Many expenses repeat monthly (subscriptions). Challenge costs are typically one-time per challenge.
Not Challenge-Specific
Expenses aren't linked to particular challenges. TradingView helps with all your trading, not just one evaluation.
Expense Categories in Detail
Tools & Software
Charting platforms (TradingView, Sierra Chart)
Trading journals (Edgewonk, TraderSync)
Backtesting software
Scanner/screener subscriptions
Education & Coaching
Online courses
Mentorship programs
Trading books
Webinars and workshops
Conference attendance
Data & Research
Market data feeds
News subscriptions
Research services
Economic calendars
Hardware
Computer/laptop
Monitors
Keyboard, mouse
Trading desk setup
Other
Anything that doesn't fit above
Professional services (accounting)
Office supplies
Analysis: Challenge Costs
Cost per funded account: Total challenge costs ÷ Number of funded accounts received
Example: $5,000 in costs, 3 funded accounts = $1,667 per funded account
Break-even analysis: How many payouts do I need to cover my challenge costs?
Trend over time: Are you getting more efficient (lower cost per funded account)?
Analysis: Expenses
Monthly burn rate: Total monthly expenses (subscriptions + regular costs)
Essential vs. optional: Which expenses are critical? Which could you cut if needed?
ROI on education: Did that $2,000 course improve your trading? Hard to measure, but worth considering.
Combined "Money Out" Picture
Total outflow = Challenge Costs + Expenses
Both reduce your net result. Both are necessary for running a trading business. But understanding each helps you optimize:
Reduce challenge costs by improving pass rate
Reduce expenses by eliminating unused subscriptions
Invest in high-ROI areas (education that improves pass rate)
Recording Correctly
In Challenges module:
Challenge purchase prices
Any costs directly tied to specific evaluations
In Transactions module:
All other business expenses
Recurring subscriptions
One-time purchases (courses, hardware)
Anything not specific to a single challenge
Common Questions
Where do challenge subscription fees go? If it's a monthly fee to keep a challenge active, record in Challenges. If it's a general service, record in Transactions.
What about reset fees? Record in Challenges—it's a cost directly tied to that specific challenge attempt.
What about broker fees? For private accounts, that's part of trading costs (handled in Private Accounts). For funded accounts, typically deducted from your payout, not recorded separately.
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