Passing is a milestone, not the final step.
A crypto prop trading challenge measures whether a trader can reach the target while respecting drawdown, trading days and platform rules. When the stage is completed successfully, the customer can become eligible for the next step. That next step depends on the account type and current rules.
For many evaluation models, the path includes a challenge stage, a verification stage and then a review before funded account eligibility. The review is there to check whether performance was achieved within the rules and whether the customer can continue into the next phase.
The verification stage confirms consistency.
Verification is designed to reduce the chance that a single lucky or overly concentrated trading period is mistaken for a repeatable process. The target may differ from the first challenge stage, and the minimum trading days can also be different.
Traders should treat verification as a continuation of the same risk process. If the strategy only worked because the trader accepted too much risk in the first stage, verification can expose that quickly.
Review, KYC and account eligibility.
After a trader completes the required stage, the platform can request identity verification, compliance checks and agreement acceptance. These steps protect the company, the trader and the reward process.
KYC/AML is not a punishment after success. It is part of operating a structured platform. A trader may need to confirm identity, contact details, residency information, payout details and agreement terms before any funded account or reward request can move forward.
The app should make this path clear: completed stage, review status, required actions and next account state. Ambiguity at this point creates unnecessary support tickets and anxiety.
What 80% profit split means.
An 80% profit split means the published trader share of approved funded rewards. It is a strong headline, but the important word is approved. Rewards are conditional and subject to the current rules, account review, KYC/AML checks and any applicable agreement.
This distinction matters for legal clarity and customer trust. A platform should not promise guaranteed payouts simply because a trader reached a target. It should explain the eligibility path, the review process and how the reward request is handled.
What if the challenge is lost?
Losing a challenge is common in evaluation trading. The useful product experience is not to hide that fact, but to help the customer understand what happened: which rule failed, when it happened, and whether there is a new challenge offer or discount available.
For the customer, a clear history view is better than vague failure text. It should show account status, closed trades, final P/L, close reason and whether the booking is archived. For the business, a structured recovery offer can bring the customer back without pretending that the earlier loss did not matter.
Frequently asked questions.
Does passing a crypto prop challenge guarantee a funded account?
No. Passing the challenge can make a trader eligible for the next stage or review, but funded access and rewards remain conditional.
Why is KYC required after passing?
KYC and AML checks help verify identity, eligibility and compliance before any funded path or reward process is approved.
What does an 80% profit split mean?
It is the published trader share of approved funded rewards. It is not a guaranteed payout and remains subject to review, rules and eligibility.
Can a failed challenge be repeated?
That depends on the current product catalog and any recovery offer. The customer should review the booking history and available checkout options.
