Financial and Business News

Prop Firm Crypto Payouts Doubled to $115 Million in Q1 2026, but Growth Has Stalled Since December

Wednesday, 22/04/2026 | 19:24 GMT by Damian Chmiel
  • Tracked payouts across the top 10 prop firms jumped 109% year-over-year, yet held flat against Q4 2025.
  • FM Intelligence data shows 6 smaller firms posted double-digit declines, while 5 operators added regulated brokerage entities in the last 12 months.
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Crypto payouts tracked on public blockchains across the ten largest proprietary trading firms rose from $55.3 million in Q1 2025 to $115.1 million in Q1 2026, according to a new FM Intelligence analysis.

Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)

The 109% year-over-year jump masks a sharper story, the figure barely moved against the $115.2 million recorded in Q4 2025, a 0.1% sequential change that points to an inflection after two years of rapid expansion.

👉 Read the full FM Intelligence analysis here:Tracked Prop Firm Crypto Payouts Doubled to $115M in Q1 2026

Two Prop Firms Now Account for 71% of Tracked Volume

Within the cohort, the distribution of growth was uneven. FundedNext CFDs climbed 293% year-over-year to $42.7 million, while MyFunded Futures rose 161% to $38.5 million. Together the two firms represented 70.5% of Q1 2026 tracked payouts across the top 10. Six other operators moved the other way, with TopTier Trader down 78%, FXIFY down 59%, and Blue Guardian and E8 Markets both posting double-digit declines.

The broader 2025 payout league table compiled by Prop Firm Match put the full-year figure at roughly $325 million, excluding FTMO and The5ers.

Transaction counts continued to climb even as aggregate dollar flows flattened. The cohort processed 61,682 payout events in Q1 2026, up 8.1% from Q4 2025 and 129% year-over-year. Average payout size fell to $1,865 from $2,020, suggesting more traders are hitting first-payout thresholds but at smaller ticket sizes.

Five Firms Added Brokerage Licenses in 10 Months

The plateau at the top has coincided with a structural pivot across the surviving cohort. Between May 2025 and March 2026, five prop firms or their founders added regulated brokerage entities to their corporate structures. FTMO closed its $250 million acquisition of OANDA on December 1, 2025, financed through a UniCredit-led credit line. FundedNext launched FNmarkets in May 2025 under a Comoros licence, with Mauritius and Dubai applications pending.

The5ers founders took a minority stake in CySEC -licensed TSG Brokers, which went live in January 2026. The Trading Pit registered TTP Markets with the Seychelles FSA, and Seacrest, formerly MyFundedFX, shut down its prop operations in early February 2026 to operate exclusively as an FSCA-regulated CFD broker. FM Intelligence estimates approximately 80 to 100 prop firms ceased operations between January 2024 and Q1 2026.

The Math That Still Defines the Industry

FPFX Technology data covering 300,000 accounts across 10 firms shows a 14% challenge pass rate and a 7% payout rate, with average payouts equal to roughly 4% of funded account size. The July 2025 insolvency of Funded Unicorn, which described losses in the high seven figures from mirroring all funded positions one-for-one in the market, illustrated the risk that brokerage infrastructure is now being built to address.

No jurisdiction has enacted bespoke prop firm regulation as of April 2026. The Czech National Bank, CySEC, and ASIC have signaled scrutiny without concrete rules.

The CFTC's case against MyForexFunds was dismissed with prejudice in May 2025 after a special master found the regulator had taken "deliberate steps down a path of obfuscation and avoidance."

Yesterday (Tuesday), prop firm E8 Markets released a PR statement warning retail traders about the CFD market, noting that most participants lose money there. At the same time, it describes itself as a “SaaS educational simulation platform for financial markets” to avoid regulatory scrutiny.

👉 Read the full FM Intelligence breakdown, including firm-by-firm payout tables, the brokerage build-out tracker, and sequential comparisons:Tracked Prop Firm Crypto Payouts Doubled to $115M in Q1 2026

Crypto payouts tracked on public blockchains across the ten largest proprietary trading firms rose from $55.3 million in Q1 2025 to $115.1 million in Q1 2026, according to a new FM Intelligence analysis.

Singapore Summit: Meet the largest APAC brokers you know (and those you still don't!)

The 109% year-over-year jump masks a sharper story, the figure barely moved against the $115.2 million recorded in Q4 2025, a 0.1% sequential change that points to an inflection after two years of rapid expansion.

👉 Read the full FM Intelligence analysis here:Tracked Prop Firm Crypto Payouts Doubled to $115M in Q1 2026

Two Prop Firms Now Account for 71% of Tracked Volume

Within the cohort, the distribution of growth was uneven. FundedNext CFDs climbed 293% year-over-year to $42.7 million, while MyFunded Futures rose 161% to $38.5 million. Together the two firms represented 70.5% of Q1 2026 tracked payouts across the top 10. Six other operators moved the other way, with TopTier Trader down 78%, FXIFY down 59%, and Blue Guardian and E8 Markets both posting double-digit declines.

The broader 2025 payout league table compiled by Prop Firm Match put the full-year figure at roughly $325 million, excluding FTMO and The5ers.

Transaction counts continued to climb even as aggregate dollar flows flattened. The cohort processed 61,682 payout events in Q1 2026, up 8.1% from Q4 2025 and 129% year-over-year. Average payout size fell to $1,865 from $2,020, suggesting more traders are hitting first-payout thresholds but at smaller ticket sizes.

Five Firms Added Brokerage Licenses in 10 Months

The plateau at the top has coincided with a structural pivot across the surviving cohort. Between May 2025 and March 2026, five prop firms or their founders added regulated brokerage entities to their corporate structures. FTMO closed its $250 million acquisition of OANDA on December 1, 2025, financed through a UniCredit-led credit line. FundedNext launched FNmarkets in May 2025 under a Comoros licence, with Mauritius and Dubai applications pending.

The5ers founders took a minority stake in CySEC -licensed TSG Brokers, which went live in January 2026. The Trading Pit registered TTP Markets with the Seychelles FSA, and Seacrest, formerly MyFundedFX, shut down its prop operations in early February 2026 to operate exclusively as an FSCA-regulated CFD broker. FM Intelligence estimates approximately 80 to 100 prop firms ceased operations between January 2024 and Q1 2026.

The Math That Still Defines the Industry

FPFX Technology data covering 300,000 accounts across 10 firms shows a 14% challenge pass rate and a 7% payout rate, with average payouts equal to roughly 4% of funded account size. The July 2025 insolvency of Funded Unicorn, which described losses in the high seven figures from mirroring all funded positions one-for-one in the market, illustrated the risk that brokerage infrastructure is now being built to address.

No jurisdiction has enacted bespoke prop firm regulation as of April 2026. The Czech National Bank, CySEC, and ASIC have signaled scrutiny without concrete rules.

The CFTC's case against MyForexFunds was dismissed with prejudice in May 2025 after a special master found the regulator had taken "deliberate steps down a path of obfuscation and avoidance."

Yesterday (Tuesday), prop firm E8 Markets released a PR statement warning retail traders about the CFD market, noting that most participants lose money there. At the same time, it describes itself as a “SaaS educational simulation platform for financial markets” to avoid regulatory scrutiny.

👉 Read the full FM Intelligence breakdown, including firm-by-firm payout tables, the brokerage build-out tracker, and sequential comparisons:Tracked Prop Firm Crypto Payouts Doubled to $115M in Q1 2026

About the Author: Damian Chmiel
Damian Chmiel
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Damian Chmiel is a Senior Analyst & Editor at Finance Magnates with more than 15 years of experience in the CFD and online trading industry. Active as both a trader and journalist since 2010, he focuses on broker coverage, fintech innovation, and regulatory developments across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia. His work includes interviews with C-level leaders at major brokerages and fintech platforms, as well as co-authoring Finance Magnates’ quarterly industry benchmarking reports. Damian’s reporting is data-driven, market-aware, and grounded in direct industry engagement. His analysis and commentary have also been cited by external media outlets, including Investing.com, Binance, The Asset, Stockhead, and Dispatch. Education: MA in Finance and Accounting, Cracow University of Economics

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