E8 Markets is a proprietary trading firm founded in 2021 in Dallas, Texas. It operates entirely in a simulated trading environment and is not broker backed, which is common among independent prop firms but places more emphasis on internal pricing, execution quality, and rule enforcement.
E8 scored 64/100 overall because it combines strong market access and platform choice with relatively restrictive funded stage conditions. The one step challenge structure is straightforward, and E8 One offers good customisation options, but real-time trailing drawdowns and layered payout rules make securing a funded account long term more difficult.
E8 Markets gives you four one step models across Forex, Futures, and Crypto, each with different drawdown systems, platform options, and payout flexibility. The big divider is whether you want full customisation (E8 One) or fixed rules with EOD drawdown (all Signature accounts).
All accounts have no time limit or minimum trading days, fair rules, and and a clear evaluation process, but it’s important to understand the strict rules that vary between models.
| E8 Challenge | E8 One Forex | E8 Signature Forex | E8 Signature Futures | E8 Signature Crypto |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Evaluation Type | One step | One step | One step | One step |
| Account Sizes | $5k – $500k | $50k – $150k | $50k – $150k | $50k – $150k |
| Drawdown Type | Real-time trailing | EOD trailing | EOD trailing | EOD trailing |
| Max DD | 4% – 14% | 3% – 4% | 3% – 4% | 3% – 4% |
| Daily Loss Rule | 3% (scales with DD selection) | 2% daily pause (funded only) | 2% daily pause (funded only) | 2% daily pause (funded only) |
| Profit Target | 6% – 21% | 6% | 6% | 6% |
| Profit Split | 80% – 100% | 80% | 80% | 80% |
| Platforms | MatchTrader, MT5, cTrader, TradeLocker | MT5, TradeLocker | E8 Futures, Tradovate | MT5, TradeLocker |
| Automation with EAs | ✔︎ | ✔︎ | No EAs | ✔︎ |
| Weekend Holding | ✔︎ | No | No | No |
| News Trading | ⚠︎ Restricted once funded | ✔︎ | ✔︎ | ✔︎ |
| Min / Max Trading Days | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
E8 One is the most flexible option, offering eight account sizes from $5k up to $500k with a configurable profit target that scales with your chosen drawdown, typically sitting around 8%. You can fully customise trailing drawdown choosing an amount between 4–14%, as well as payout splits with you can updgrade to 90% or 100%, from the default 80%, making it the most customisable account type.
It suits confident traders who want control over their parameters and don’t mind managing equity more actively than on the EOD-based Signature models.
| Account Size | Fee Range | Profit Target | Daily DD | Max DD | DD Type | Profit Split |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $40 – $108 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $10,000 | $72 – $197 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $25,000 | $154 – $420 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $50,000 | $235 – $643 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $100,000 | $398 – $1,090 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $200,000 | $650 – $1,782 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $400,000 | $1,301 – $3,567 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
| $500,000 | $1,627 – $4,460 | 6%–21% | 3%–9.2% | 4%–14% | Trailing | 80%–100% |
Signature Forex keeps things simple with fixed $50k, $100k, and $150k accounts and a 6% profit target. The EOD trailing drawdown is softer than E8 One because it only updates once per day, but the no-overnight and no-weekend rule makes it a stricter model for swing traders.
It’s easiest for consistent day traders who want predictable rules, stable risk limits, and no customisation decisions to worry about.
| Account Size | Fee Range | Profit Target | Daily DD | Max DD | DD Type | Profit Split |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $130 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 4% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
| $100,000 | $260 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 3% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
| $150,000 | $390 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 3% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
Signature Futures is the tightest model operationally, with fixed account sizes ($50k–$150k), an EOD trailing drawdown, and a 6% profit target. Positions auto-close at 15:10 CT and automation isn’t allowed, so this is a pure intraday futures challenge on CME products.
Compared to the forex accounts, this is stricter because you can’t hold through sessions and must work within exchange hours, but futures traders who already structure their day around market opens will find it straightforward.
| Account Size | Fee Range | Profit Target | Daily DD | Max DD | DD Type | Profit Split |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $130 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 4% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
| $100,000 | $260 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 3% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
| $150,000 | $390 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 3% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
Signature Crypto mirrors the Forex version with fixed $50k – $150k accounts, an EOD trailing drawdown, and a 6% profit target, but applies tighter leverage rules across altcoins. Overnight and weekend holding aren’t allowed, so it’s designed for active crypto day traders rather than swing or momentum strategies.
It’s easier than E8 One from a drawdown perspective, but stricter in terms of session limits. Algo traders can still use EAs here as long as their strategy isn’t HFT or shared.
| Account Size | Fee Range | Profit Target | Daily DD | Max DD | DD Type | Profit Split |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $130 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 4% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
| $100,000 | $260 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 3% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
| $150,000 | $390 | 6% | 2% (funded only) | 3% EOD | EOD trailing | 80% |
Add-ons mainly apply to E8 One, which is the only model that allows meaningful customisation of risk and payout parameters. Signature accounts run on fixed rules and do not allow changes to drawdown, targets, or payout structure.
For E8 One, available add-ons include:
Signature accounts do not support these add-ons, but there’s a swap-free option on Signature Forex, which is a fee treatment rather than a risk or rule customisation and still follows the same fixed trading rules.
E8 doesn’t offer a traditional scaling plan on any of its current models. E8 One and all Signature accounts keep the starting balance fixed, so if you want more buying power you do it by running multiple funded accounts rather than growing a single one.
You can hold up to a set number of E8 Trader accounts per product type, which is how E8 handles “bigger allocation” instead of balance scaling. Classic balance scaling only applies to legacy E8 Classic and E8 Track accounts, which are no longer part of the main product lineup.
E8’s rule set depends heavily on whether you choose E8 One or one of the Signature evaluation accounts. E8 One gives you the most freedom, with overnight holding, weekend holding, EAs, and flexible news handling during the challenge. The only restriction appears once you reach the funded stage, where high impact news windows become limited and certain trades placed during restricted events may not count.
How We Scored E8’s Challenges and Rules
E8 scored 5/10 for challenges because, while the one step structure and flexible sizing options are strong, the rule framework becomes significantly stricter at the funded stage and there’s no instant funding or two step evaluations. Real time trailing drawdown on E8 One and consistency requirements on Signature accounts create a tougher environment than most competitors, making funding accessible but long-term retention harder.
E8’s pricing depends on which market you trade, with raw spreads on Forex and Metals, percentage-based fees on Crypto, and full exchange fee schedules on Futures. There are no platform surcharges or data-feed charges, and the only optional cost is choosing commission-free execution on E8 One.
When you trade forex with E8, pricing depends on whether you choose E8 One or the fixed Signature Forex account. Both use raw spreads with per-lot commissions by default, but only E8 One lets you switch to a commission-free setup.
If you go for raw pricing, average spreads for EUR/USD are 0.8 pips plus a $5 per lot roundturn commission fee. For metals, indices, and commodities you’ll be paying $6 per lot roundturn, with spreads for XAU/USD averaging 0.26 pips. If you are trading indices, leverage can go up to as much as $12 depending on the symbol.
If you want commission free trading, you can only do this via an add-on on the E8 One Forex account type only, but spreads obviously widen to compensate. Signature Forex Accounts are raw pricing only, and you don’t have this add-on option.
Crypto operates on a different structure, using percentage-based commissions instead of lot-based pricing. Each crypto CFD trade incurs 0.035% in + 0.035% out commission fee, and spreads vary by asset class. BTC/USD often averages around 11–12 points, with ETH/USD and altcoins sitting much wider based on liquidity.
Crypto leverage restrictions mean spreads matter more at the position-sizing level, especially on smaller altcoins where a wider quoted spread increases the effective cost of entry. Execution remains raw only, there is no commission-free option for crypto.
As you are prop trading crypto CFDs, there’s no blockchain fees or need for a crypto wallet, unless you are using it for profit payout withdrawals.
Futures pricing at E8 is straightforward because it follows CME style pricing, so every contract has a fixed cost per trade, and there are no platform, data feed, or hidden charges on the E8 Futures interface or Tradovate. The only thing you pay for is the exchange fee built into each order.
Typical costs include:
Because these programs use CME rules, there are no overnight fees, but all positions are force-closed at 15:10 CT. This prevents session-to-session margin variation from affecting the account and keeps drawdown calculations clean. There are no platform or data-feed charges on the E8 Futures interface or Tradovate, and automation isn’t allowed on this model, which keeps fee exposure strictly tied to manual orderflow.
All Signature Futures accounts run on intraday-only rules, so positions automatically lose at 15:10 CT, meaning you never carry exposure into the next session. That means no overnight financing, no margin changes, and no holding risk, but it also means you’re restricted to pure intraday setups. Automated trading isn’t allowed on this model, so your costs and execution remain tied to manual orderflow rather than EA-driven volume.
How We Scored E8’s Spreads and Fees
E8 scored 6/10 for spreads and fees because its raw pricing on forex and metals is competitive, but indices and crypto are more expensive and the commission-free add-on widens spreads substantially. Some traders also report slippage discrepancies on the simulated CFD feed, which reduces cost transparency.
E8 offers different market access depending on which challenge you choose. E8 One has the largest product range with 79 instruments, while the Signature models narrow the focus and give you higher leverage or asset specific trading conditions.
| Asset Class | E8 One | Signature Forex | Signature Crypto | Signature Futures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Forex | 1:30 | 1:50 | ✖︎ | ✖︎ |
| Indices | 1:15 | 1:25 | ✖︎ | Exchange margin |
| Metals | 1:15 | 1:25 | ✖︎ | Exchange margin |
| Energies | 1:15 | 1:25 | ✖︎ | Exchange margin |
| Crypto (Bitcoin and Ethereum only) | 1:1 | ✖︎ | 1:5 | ✖︎ |
| Other Crypto (Altcoins) | 1:1 | ✖︎ | 1:2 | ✖︎ |
| Futures (CME) | ✖︎ | ✖︎ | ✖︎ | Varies by contract |
E8 One is the only account that gives you the full CFD product list plus crypto in one place. It has the widest range of instruments and is the most flexible challenge and funded account overall.
E8 One is also the only model with add-ons, so traders who like to tailor their setup usually end up here.
Signature Forex includes all CFD markets except crypto, and it offers the highest leverage out of all accounts on forex pairs.
This is the most straightforward model if you only care about traditional markets and want more buying power.
Signature Crypto is focused entirely on trading digital assets. It has a great range of crypto markets, including major coins and a long altcoin selection.
Because this model is crypto-only, it behaves differently during volatility spikes and requires more deliberate risk management.
Futures trading is separate from CFD trading and is only available on the Signature Futures account. As with all futures prop fir, challenges, this account uses margin per contract instead of leverage, and all trading is intraday only.
You size positions using the margin per contract, and the allowed margin depends on your account size.
| Account Size | Margin Allowance | Max Contracts (E-mini / Standard) | Max Micro Contracts |
|---|---|---|---|
| $50,000 | $40,000 | 4 contracts (for any product with $10,000 margin per contract) | Up to 40 micro contracts (for products with $1,000 margin per micro) |
| $100,000 | $80,000 | 8 contracts | Up to 80 micro contracts |
| $150,000 | $120,000 | 12 contracts | Up to 120 micro contracts |
This structure keeps futures sizing predictable. For example, a $100,000 account has $80,000 of margin allowance. If a product requires $10,000 per contract, you can open up to 8 standard contracts. If a micro requires $1,000 per contract, you can open up to 80 micro contracts. This helps you estimate your max exposure before placing any trades.
How We Scored E8’s Markets and Leverage
E8 scored 7/10 for markets and leverage due to its genuinely broad instrument list (especially on E8 One) but relatively conservative leverage on CFDs and restrictive intraday-only rules for futures. Coverage is wide, but practical flexibility varies sharply by account type.
E8 offers five trading platforms across its models, but not every platform is available on every account type. E8 One gives you the most choice, while the Signature programs each have fixed platform options.
Execution quality is consistent across all platforms, and pricing comes from the same underlying feed, but the workflow and tools vary depending on which platform you choose.
| Platform | E8 One | Signature Forex | Signature Crypto | Signature Futures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Match-Trader | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ |
| MetaTrader 5 (MT5) | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ |
| cTrader | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| TradeLocker | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ |
| E8 Futures Platform | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| Tradovate | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
Match-Trader is available for E8 One, Signature Forex, and Signature Crypto accounts, and has the smoothest execution flow out of the available CFD platforms. It uses TradingView style charting, which makes it very easy for intraday traders to work with.
Match-Trader is a good option if you want a simple, stable, and visually clean platform without the complexity of MetaTrader.
MT5 is the most widely used platform across the prop trading industry and is only available on E8 Signature accounts, not E8 One. This is important because traders who rely on MT5 will need to choose either Signature Forex or Signature Crypto if they want to stay on MT5.
cTrader is a popular choice for traders who want more advanced charting and cleaner execution tools than MetaTrader. It offers native depth of market, good algorithmic trading support, and a modern UI. It’s available for E8 One and Signature Forex accounts.
cTrader is a step up from MT5 in terms of orderflow tools, making it a solid choice for technical intraday traders.
TradeLocker is a lightweight, browser-based platform designed for simplicity. It has basic charting tools and low system requirements, so it works well on lower-powered devices. If you want to use TradeLocker, you’ll need to chose an E8 One, Signature Forex, or Signature Crypto accounts.
TradeLocker is best if you want a very straightforward platform without advanced complexity.
The E8 Futures Platform is E8’s own browser based futures interface designed for the Signature Futures account only. It mirrors the layout and workflow of most modern futures platforms, but is simplified for traders who only need core execution tools.
It connects directly to simulated CME data and is designed specifically for the Signature Futures account.
This platform is the default for most Signature Futures users and is ideal if you want fast execution without the extra tools that heavier platforms include.
Tradovate is the more advanced option for futures traders with full depth of market, bracket orders, strong charting tools, and a professional grade interface. You get CME style functionality with intraday margin requirements that match the E8 program rules.
Tradovate is best if you want more precision in your order placement or if you already trade futures and want a familiar workflow.
How We Scored E8’s Platforms
E8 scored 7/10 for platforms because it offers an above average range with MT5, cTrader, Match-Trader, TradeLocker, plus two futures platforms. The downside is that platform choice is tied to account selection, meaning traders can’t freely mix products and platforms. Occasional user concerns about feed accuracy prevent a higher rating.
E8’s funding structure is built around simulated capital from start to finish, which means the funded stage works as a virtual funded account. They offer a good range of payment and witdhrawal methods, but there’s strict critiria you need to meet before you can start requesting payouts.
You can pay with cards, Apple Pay, Google Pay, crypto, or bank transfer, and the evaluation fee itself is a one off cost. If you never place a trade, they will refund the fee, but once you start trading the refund window is gone.
There’s no platform fees, no data fees, and no inactivity penalties, but if you choose the E8 One account addons can add up quickly.
When you pass a challenge, your account converts into an E8 Trader account, but the entire environment remains simulated. Nothing switches to live execution, and you continue trading on the same platform feed you used during the evaluation. KYC
Before you can request your first payout, E8 applies strict requirements that do not exist during the challenge stage. These rules are designed to filter out large one-day wins and force a minimum level of consistency before E8 treats the account as eligible for withdrawals.
The funded account requirements you must meet before requesting a payout differ between accounts.
E8 One
Signature Forex, Signature Crypto, and Futures
As with all reputable prop firms, you also can’t actually get paid until you clear KYC checks. That means providing ID, address verification, and passing checks with the bank or RiseWorks (crypto).
E8’s payout setup looks attractive on the surface with 80% – 100% profit shares, but there are a lot of conditions sitting behind the headline numbers. On demand payouts sounds flexible, and there are no direct payout fees from E8, but buffers and payout caps affect how easy it is to actually get paid.
E8 does not charge a withdrawal fee, but both payout methods (bank and crypto networks) can. You have a $50 minimum withdrawal via bank transfer, and crypto withdrawals require a minimum of $250. We found payouts were approved within 1-2 business days, then paid out between 2-5 business days.
On Signature Forex, Signature Crypto, and Signature Futures, you must keep a payout buffer equal to your EOD trailing drawdown, and that amount has to stay in the account at all times. These models also use payout caps, which limit how much you can withdraw per cycle and only increase as you build a longer payout history.
E8 One is the exception, and it has no payout buffer and no payout caps so once you meet the basic consistency rules you can withdraw whatever profit the account has available. This makes E8 One far more flexible at the payout stage, but also easier to mismanage if you don’t leave enough room to trade safely.
Typical cap progression looks like this:
First & second payout caps:
Third & fourth payouts:
Fifth payout onward:
The combination of mandatory buffer plus capped profit payout amounts means you can request withdrawals on demand, but the withdrawal size ramps up gradually as you show consistency.
How We Scored E8’s Payouts
E8 scored 4/10 for payouts because, even though profit splits range from 80% to 100%, the system is burdened by payout buffers, best-day rules, profitable-day requirements, and strict payout caps. Payout processors are reliable and funding is generally fast, but the number of conditions makes withdrawals harder than at many competing firms.
In terms of support and education, you get extended hours weekday support via live chat and email support, and a detailed FAQ section on their website. But there’s no real educational ecosystem behind the prop firm, so new traders won’t find much guidance beyond rule explanations.
E8’s live chat covers most operational questions quickly, and we found response times were generally good during market hours. The support team handles account activations, platform issues, and payout queries efficiently, but anything outside that (trading strategy, platform nuances, edge cases around rules) tends to be answered in broader terms. That isn’t unusual for a prop firm, but it’s worth knowing upfront if you expect deeper technical guidance.
This is one area where E8 doesn’t really compete with firms that offer mentorship, webinars, or trading communities. There’s no structured education, no verified strategy content, and no in-house analysis. The dashboard tools are clean and functional, but they’re not designed to teach you how to trade or manage risk.
How We Scored E8’s Support
E8’s customer support performs well for account-related issues, with responsive weekday live chat and email handling most operational queries efficiently. However, the lack of structured education, coaching, or trader development resources limits its usefulness for newer traders.
E8 sits in the middle ground for transparency. The rules, drawdown limits, and payout conditions are published clearly, but pricing is based on internal simulated feeds rather than broker-backed execution. Because everything runs on virtual capital, traders are relying on E8’s own systems to behave fairly rather than an external liquidity venue. That isn’t unusual for independent prop firms, but it does require a level of trust in how E8 manages its fills and risk controls.
Yes, E8 is a legit company and prop firm with a working payout track record, but it is not broker backed and all trading is done in a simulated environment. You pay for access to their programs, trade virtual capital, and only ever withdraw profit shares via processors like Plane (bank) or RiseWorks (crypto) once you pass KYC and meet the payout rules. There is no client money held for live trading and no direct brokerage relationship.
E8 holds a 4.4/5 star TrustScore with around 3,000 reviews, which is strong compared to the industry average. Most ratings are favourable, with the majority of feedback describing smooth processes and reliable support.
Most positive reviews mention fast payouts, responsive customer support, and an easy onboarding experience. Traders also praise the dashboard and smooth platform setup. Most negative reviews point to slippage concerns, confusion around best-day rules and buffers, and some accounts being closed after hitting risk limits or failing risk interviews.
A small number of traders also dispute execution quality or feel the payout rules are too restrictive.
How We Scored E8’s Trust and Transparency
E8 scored 6/10 for trust and transparency. The strong Trustpilot rating and many verified payout reports support credibility, but E8 does not disclose liquidity providers, operates entirely on simulated feeds, and some traders report slippage issues or disagreements around risk rules. Good support and active community presence keep the score above average.
E8 scored 64/100 overall because the proprietary trading firm does a lot right on products and platforms, but loses ground on payout friction, strict risk rules, and only mid range transparency. The one step structure, flexible sizing, and strong platform lineup are genuine positives, yet the real time trailing drawdown on E8 One and the funded stage consistency rules make long term retention harder than at many rivals.
From a markets perspective, E8 is strong, with wide CFD coverage, a dedicated crypto product, and a separate CME style futures offering, which is why it scored higher in the markets and platforms categories. But the advantages here are balanced out by conservative CFD leverage, intraday only futures rules, and a complex payout framework built around buffers, best day limits, profitable day counts, and caps that start low and only scale with history.
Trust and transparency sit in the middle. A positive Trustpilot score and plenty of verified payouts support E8’s legitimacy, but the fully simulated setup, lack of disclosed liquidity providers, and recurring complaints about execution and risk enforcement prevent it from scoring higher. Taken together, E8 is best suited to experienced traders who can work inside tight risk and payout rules, rather than beginners looking for something simple and forgiving.
Yes, E8 Markets does pay out funded traders who meet the payout rules and pass KYC, and there is a large volume of verified payout reports confirming this. Withdrawals are processed through bank transfer or crypto), with approvals typically taking 1–2 business days and funds arriving within a few days after. Most payout disputes come from traders failing consistency, buffer, or risk requirements rather than non-payment.
Yes, news trading is allowed on E8, but the rules change once you are funded and depend on the account type. During the challenge phase, news trading is permitted on all accounts. On E8 One funded accounts, certain high impact news windows are restricted and trades placed during those periods may not count toward payouts. Signature Forex, Signature Crypto, and Signature Futures allow news trading at all stages, subject to drawdown rules.
Yes, E8 allows automated trading strategies with Expert Advisors on most accounts, provided the trading strategy follows their rules. EAs are permitted on E8 One, Signature Forex, and Signature Crypto, as long as they are not high frequency trading (HFT), latency arbitrage, or copy trading systems. Automated trading is not allowed on Signature Futures, which is strictly manual and intraday trading only.
The best forex prop firms in our rankings score 90/100 or higher, with FundedNext, DNA Funded, and BrightFunded leading the list due to flexible challenge structures, clearer payout rules, and stronger long-term scaling. While E8 is a legitimate firm, it does not make our top 10 forex prop firms for traders worldwide shortlist, mainly because its funded-stage consistency rules, payout caps, and simulated execution reduce overall flexibility compared to the highest-rated forex-focused competitors.