{"term":{"slug":"is-prop-trading-legal","term":"Is Prop Trading Legal?","definition":"Retail prop firm trading is legal in most jurisdictions. The industry operates in a regulatory grey area in many countries -- firms are not classified as traditional financial service providers because traders do not deposit client funds, but regulatory scrutiny is increasing.","extendedExplanation":"The legal status of retail prop firms hinges on what they are actually selling. Most retail prop firms argue they sell access to a trading simulation environment (a service) rather than a financial product. Under this framing, the challenge fee is a software subscription, not an investment, and evaluation profits are simulated gains until the firm chooses to pay out. This interpretation has allowed the industry to operate without broker-dealer registration in the United States.\n\nThe regulatory landscape is evolving. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) has issued guidance suggesting that some prop firm structures may constitute commodity pool operations, requiring registration. In the EU, the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID II) applies to entities dealing in financial instruments -- whether prop firms fall under this framework is jurisdiction-specific. The UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) does not currently regulate retail prop firms specifically but has noted the industry under its consumer protection mandate.\n\nFor traders, the legal question that matters most is not whether the firm is regulated, but whether the firm will actually pay out profits. Many profitable prop trading experiences have occurred at fully unregulated firms (Apex, FundedNext) while some regulated-adjacent structures have failed to pay traders. Practical due diligence: check community forums (PropFirmMatch, Reddit r/Propfirm), look for payout proof from multiple traders, verify the firm has been operating for at least 2 years, and never risk more than you can afford to lose in evaluation fees.","exampleWithNumbers":"Regulatory comparison by jurisdiction (2025): United States -- no specific prop firm regulation; CFTC oversight possible for futures-focused firms; legal to operate and trade. European Union -- MiFID II may apply if real capital is involved; most EU-based prop firms (including FTMO in Czech Republic) operate under terms that exclude them from financial instrument classification. United Kingdom -- FCA does not regulate prop firms as of 2025 but monitors the sector. Australia -- ASIC has taken action against some prop firms marketing to Australian residents. A trader in Singapore, Hong Kong, or UAE faces no specific restrictions on participating in UK, US, or EU-based prop firm evaluations.","category":"evaluation","relatedTerms":["prop-firm","how-to-start-a-prop-firm","challenge-fee","funded-account","payout-split"]},"_links":{"self":"https://runvigil.app/api/glossary/is-prop-trading-legal","page":"https://runvigil.app/learn/is-prop-trading-legal","allTerms":"https://runvigil.app/api/glossary","learn":"https://runvigil.app/learn"}}