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Deep in Drawdown? Here’s the Way Out

Every prop trader knows the feeling.

You start the day with a plan. One trade goes wrong. Then another. Suddenly you are down $1,500 on a $2,000 drawdown, and your brain starts whispering the most dangerous sentence in trading:

“Just take one big trade and make it all back.”

That is exactly how accounts get blown.

When you are deep in drawdown, the goal is not to be a hero. The goal is to survive. If you still have buying power, you still have a chance. But the moment you let frustration control your size, you are no longer trading. You are gambling with the last piece of your account.

The Worst Time to Size Up Is After a Big Loss

The natural instinct after a big loss is to press harder.

You want to erase the damage. You want to get back to breakeven. You want the account to look like nothing happened.

But one oversized trade can turn a bad day into a failed challenge.

That is why recovery mode requires the opposite approach. You do not size up. You size down.

If you are down $1,500 on a $2,000 drawdown, you are not looking for a home run. You are looking for control. That may mean trading only one micro contract until your mind and account are stable again.

One micro may feel too small after trading bigger size, but that is the point. You need to take the pressure off. You need to stop trading from panic. A couple of clean trades with small size can rebuild confidence and start putting the account back together.

Your Real Account Size Is the Drawdown

This is where most prop traders get the math wrong.

A $50,000 prop firm account does not mean you can trade like you have $50,000 of risk capital. On many standard $50K prop accounts, the drawdown is around $2,000.

That $2,000 is the number that matters.

If you lose that, the account is gone. So every trade has to be sized around the drawdown, not the headline account size.

A good rule of thumb is to risk only 5% to 10% of the drawdown per trade. On a $2,000 drawdown, that means your stop should be roughly $100 to $200 per trade.

That keeps one mistake from becoming an account killer.

And if you are already down big, the risk should usually be even smaller. This is where one micro can save the account. You are not trying to impress anyone. You are trying to stay alive long enough to recover.

Use the Two-Trade Rule as a Recovery Guardrail

Recovery mode needs guardrails.

One useful rule of thumb is this: if you take a trade and hit your stop, consider giving yourself only one more quality setup before calling it a day.

This is not because two losses automatically mean you are wrong about the market. It is because after a big drawdown, your decision-making is usually not at its best. The more you trade from a stressed account, the easier it becomes to force entries, widen stops, or convince yourself that the next trade has to work.

That is when real damage happens.

So if you are already in recovery mode, two stopped-out trades should be a warning sign. It may be time to step away, review the setups, and come back tomorrow with a clearer head.

No revenge trade. No doubling down. No “I just need one good setup.”

The market does not owe you a recovery trade. The goal is not to win the money back immediately. The goal is to avoid turning a manageable drawdown into a blown account.

A maximum loss per day is still non-negotiable. The two-trade rule is simply one practical way to help you respect it.

The Goal Is Not to Make It Back Today

This is the part traders hate hearing.

If you are down $1,500 on a $2,000 drawdown, your goal should not be to make back $1,500 today.

Your first goal is to stop the bleeding.

Your second goal is to get back in rhythm.

Your third goal is to recover slowly with clean trades.

That may mean making $100. Then $150. Then $200. It may feel slow, but slow is how you get control back.

The trader who tries to make everything back in one shot usually blows the account.

The trader who cuts size, trades one micro, and takes only the best setups gives themselves a real chance.

A few good trades and suddenly the account no longer feels like it is on life support. You are not fully recovered yet, but you are no longer spiraling.

That is the win.

The Drawdown Recovery Playbook

When you are close to the limit, the plan should be simple:

  • Stop trading and reset.
  • Cut size down to one micro.
  • Risk only 5% to 10% of the drawdown per trade.
  • On a standard $50K account with a $2,000 drawdown, that means roughly $100 to $200 max risk per trade.
  • If you hit your stop, consider giving yourself only one more quality setup.
  • If the second trade also fails, that is usually your sign to stop for the day.
  • Respect your maximum loss per day.
  • Do not try to make it all back in one trade.
  • Build back slowly.

This is not exciting. It is not flashy. It will not give you a dopamine hit.

But it keeps you alive.

And in prop trading, survival is the edge most traders forget.

Final Thought

A big drawdown does not have to end the account.

What ends the account is the emotional decision that comes after the drawdown.

The amateur response is: “I need one big trade to get it back.”

The professional response is: “I need to reduce size, protect the account, and trade my way out with discipline.”

Down $1,500 on a $2,000 drawdown? Do not swing bigger.

Trade smaller. Set your max loss. Take the pressure off.

A couple of good trades with one micro, and you may be surprised how quickly the account starts to feel normal again.