Prop Firms

StocksProp Firm Directory

The stock prop firm space is smaller and stranger than futures, and pretending otherwise would do you a disservice. There is exactly one major firm funding traders on real US shares — Trade The Pool — and a much larger crowd of multi-asset firms that let you trade stock CFDs, which is a different instrument with different rules and, crucially, different US availability. The four featured firms below cover the realistic options for an equity-focused trader in 2026. The remaining firms in the table are legitimate operators where stocks are one menu item among many. Failed firms, non-payers, and pure affiliate funnels have been excluded. The single most important thing to understand before you spend a dollar: whether you're trading real shares or CFDs, and whether the firm even accepts US residents.

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The comparison tool filters every firm by instrument type (real shares vs CFD), US eligibility, account size, profit split, and platform. Most users land on 2–4 matches.

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▸ READ THIS FIRST

Real shares vs. stock CFDs

Almost every "stock prop firm" marketing page glosses over this distinction, and it's the one that matters most. A real-shares firm gives you direct access to the underlying equity through a broker like Interactive Brokers — you trade the actual stock, settlement and all. A CFD firm gives you a derivative that tracks the stock's price; you never own anything, leverage is higher, and overnight financing charges apply. The practical kicker for this audience: stock CFDs are not legally available to US retail residents, so most of the firms that advertise "stocks" are off the table if you're trading from the US.

REAL SHARES e.g. Trade The Pool · via Interactive Brokers You trade the actual stock (AAPL, NVDA) 1:1 buying power, no synthetic leverage No overnight financing on the share itself ✓ Available to US residents STOCK CFDs e.g. FTMO, FundedNext, FunderPro · via MT5 You trade a derivative tracking the price Higher leverage, you own nothing Overnight swap/financing charges apply ✗ Not available to US retail residents

The instrument you trade determines your rules, your costs, and whether you can legally open the account from the US.

▸ FEATURED FIRMS

The four to start with

▸ COMPLETE DIRECTORY

All stock-capable prop firms tracked

The featured firms above are the most relevant for equity traders. Below is every firm currently tracked that offers stock exposure in some form, with the instrument type flagged so you know what you're actually buying. The Real Shares tag means direct equity ownership; Stock CFD means a derivative with the US-access caveat that comes with it. For futures traders who wandered in here by accident, the futures prop firm directory is the deeper bench.

Firm Founded Instrument Trustpilot Standout Feature
Trade The Pool
Featured
2022 Real Shares 4.4 · 582 Only real-share stock firm. US-eligible. Static drawdown. View →
FTMO
Featured
2015 Stock CFD 4.8 · 30K Industry benchmark. Non-trailing 10% drawdown. View →
FundedNext
Featured
2022 Stock CFD 4.5 · 62K Largest review base. Earn during evaluation. View →
FunderPro
Featured
2022 Stock CFD 4.5 · 6K TradingView-native. One- and two-step paths. View →
The5ers
2016 Stock CFD 4.6 · 8K Same parent as Trade The Pool. Low-risk scaling model. View →
FXIFY
2023 Stock CFD 4.6 · 7K Stocks via MT5. Flexible challenge lineup, fast payouts. View →
DNA Funded
2024 Stock CFD 4.5 · 2K Broker-backed (DNA Markets). 800+ instruments incl. stocks. View →
BrightFunded
2023 Stock CFD 4.6 · 9K Stock CFDs via MT5. Reward-based loyalty program. View →
Lux Trading Firm
2020 Stock CFD 4.2 · 1.5K Long-term-hold focus. Scales to $10M. Stocks among 40+ assets. View →
E8 Markets
2021 Stock CFD 4.6 · 5K Low entry fees (from ~$33). No time limits. Scales to $1M+. View →
Why so many CFD firms? Because "stock prop trading" is overwhelmingly a CFD business. Building a real-share funding operation requires a brokerage relationship, market-data licensing, and settlement infrastructure — which is why Trade The Pool, with its Interactive Brokers backing, is essentially alone in that lane. Everyone else bolts stock CFDs onto a forex-first platform. Neither model is "bad," but they are not interchangeable, and if you're a US resident the distinction decides whether you can open the account at all. When in doubt, confirm eligibility on the firm's own site before paying an evaluation fee.

Firms we don't recommend (and why)

A directory that listed every site advertising "funded stock trading" would be mostly affiliate funnels and rebadged forex challenges. The firms above are the ones with real trader bases, verifiable payouts, and a genuine stock offering rather than a checkbox on a marketing page. A few categories of exclusion worth spelling out:

  • "Stock" firms that are really pure forex. Plenty of firms list stocks in their marketing but offer one or two index CFDs and no individual equities. If the equity menu is cosmetic, it's excluded.
  • Firms with under 12 months of operation. Too early to evaluate payout reliability or rule stability — and the stock-prop niche has seen plenty of launch-and-vanish operators.
  • Firms with verified non-payment complaints. Multiple unresolved Trustpilot complaints about withheld payouts is a hard exclusion, no exceptions.
  • Firms that switched to retroactive rule changes. If a firm changes evaluation rules after traders have paid, they're not a partner — they're a content trap.

If a stock prop firm you're considering isn't listed above, that's a signal worth taking seriously. Either it's too new to evaluate, its "stock" offering is cosmetic, or it's been excluded for one of the reasons above. The comparison tool will narrow these to the firms that actually fit how — and where — you trade.

Frequently asked questions

What is the only true stock prop firm?
Trade The Pool is the only major prop firm built specifically for stock traders that funds them on real US shares through Interactive Brokers, rather than on stock CFDs. Other firms offer stock CFDs as part of a broader multi-asset lineup, but they aren't equity-specialist firms.
Can US residents trade stocks at prop firms?
Yes, but mostly through real-share firms. Stock CFDs are not legally available to US retail residents, so the large multi-asset CFD firms (FTMO, FundedNext, FunderPro and others) have restricted US access. Trade The Pool, which uses real shares, accepts US traders. Always confirm eligibility on the firm's own site before paying.
What's the difference between real shares and stock CFDs?
With real shares you trade and effectively hold the actual equity, with 1:1 buying power and no financing charge on the share itself. With a CFD you trade a derivative that tracks the stock's price, never owning anything, with higher leverage and overnight financing costs. The instrument determines your rules, costs, and US eligibility.
Do stock prop firms have the PDT rule?
Generally no. The Pattern Day Trader rule applies to retail margin accounts under $25,000 at US brokers. Prop firm funded accounts operate under the firm's structure rather than your personal margin account, so firms like Trade The Pool let you day trade without the PDT restriction — one of the main reasons traders use them.
How much do stock prop firm evaluations cost?
Entry-level evaluations can start under $50 and scale to well over $1,000 for the largest buying-power accounts. Trade The Pool's fees range roughly from the high $40s to around $1,475 depending on account size and type, with no recurring subscription unless you reset. CFD firms vary widely, with some entry fees as low as the low $30s.

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This directory is updated quarterly. Data verified May 28, 2026. Inclusion is based on editorial judgment — operating history, trader base, payout reliability, rule stability, and genuine stock offering — not on commission rates. Instrument type (real shares vs CFD) and US eligibility should always be confirmed on the firm's own site before purchase. TrailingStopLoss.com is not currently paid by any prop firm referenced on this page; partnerships will be disclosed where they exist. Content is educational and not financial advice. Trading involves substantial risk of loss.