TickWise vs FTMO: Futures vs CFDs Prop Trading Compared
One Trades Real Futures. The Other Trades CFDs On A Demo.
FTMO has the brand. TickWise has the futures market and the real capital. Here’s the honest, head-to-head breakdown.
Table of Contents
FTMO is the household name of prop firms. Founded in 2015, ~4.86 million monthly visitors, a polished onboarding flow and a brand most Forex traders recognize on sight. They’ve earned that reputation. We’ll say it plainly.
But here’s the catch most comparison articles skip: FTMO doesn’t trade futures. They trade CFDs on Forex, indices, metals and commodities — synthetic contracts on a demo environment. TickWise sits on the opposite side: pure futures, CME contracts, real allocated capital. If you’ve landed on this article, you’re probably trying to figure out which model actually fits how you trade. Let’s compare them honestly.
- Trade using TickWise allocated capital
- Guaranteed payout
- Unlimited withdrawals, anytime
Futures vs CFDs: The Core Difference Most Articles Skip
Before comparing prices and rules, you need to understand what you’re actually trading. Because it changes everything downstream.
Futures contracts are standardized, exchange-traded instruments. When you trade ES, NQ, CL or GC at TickWise, you’re trading the same CME contract a hedge fund desk in Chicago trades. Centrally cleared. Real volume. Real order flow. Transparent fees.
CFDs (Contracts for Difference) are over-the-counter derivatives. You’re not buying or selling anything on an exchange — you’re entering a bilateral contract with the broker. The broker is your counterparty. Spreads can widen. Quotes are platform-dependent. And in prop firm context, you’re trading these CFDs on a demo account.
ℹ️ Did you know? CFDs are banned for retail traders in the United States by CFTC and SEC regulation. That’s why US-based futures prop firms exist as a distinct category — and why FTMO doesn’t accept US residents on its main programs.
Neither model is inherently bad. Both have valid use cases. What matters is matching the instrument to your trading style — and being clear-eyed about what « funded » means in each case.
TickWise vs FTMO: Side-by-Side Comparison
Here’s the honest breakdown across the metrics that actually matter:
| Feature | TickWise Funding | FTMO |
|---|---|---|
| Instruments | Futures (CME) | CFDs on Forex, indices, metals, commodities |
| Capital Type | Real allocated capital | Demo accounts (simulation) |
| Market Access | Live CME order book | Broker quotes |
| Pricing Model | $190 / $290 / $490 one-time | ~€155 to ~€1,080 one-time |
| Entry Price (smallest) | $190 (Starter $25K) | ~€155 ($10K) |
| Standard 100K Account | $490 (Expert) | ~€540 |
| Phases | 2 (Evaluation + Preparation) then funded | 2 (Challenge + Verification) then funded |
| Profit Target | 10% / 5% across phases | 10% / 5% across phases |
| Profit Split | Guaranteed payouts, unlimited withdrawals | 80% (up to 90% with Premium) |
| Funded Rules | None — just don’t hit account limit | Loss limits + consistency rules continue |
| US Traders Accepted | Yes | Restricted (no main programs) |
| Founded | 2026 | 2015 |
FTMO has the longer track record. We acknowledge that openly. Their evaluation flow is polished and their brand is global. But the moment you ask « what am I actually trading? » — the picture shifts fast.
Pricing & The True Cost of Funding
FTMO charges one-time evaluation fees too. That part is similar. The real difference is what you’re paying for.
The pricing curve is roughly comparable at the bottom — TickWise Starter is the cheapest entry point. At the 100K tier, TickWise Expert at $490 undercuts FTMO’s ~€540 by a margin. And critically, TickWise gives you real allocated capital on futures. FTMO gives you a demo account on CFDs.
💡 Pro Tip: Whatever you pay, ask yourself: am I paying to access a real market or to access a simulation that pays me from a marketing budget? With futures at TickWise, every fill ties to a live CME contract — no broker-side requoting, no synthetic spread expansion.
The TickWise Plan Reality (3 / 6 / 10 Contracts)
TickWise runs three plans. The pricing tiers up. The contract count tiers up. The rules scale proportionally. Same logic in both evaluation and funded phases.
| Account | $25K |
| Contracts | 3 |
| Target | $2,500 |
| Funded | $2.5K |
| Account | $50K |
| Contracts | 6 |
| Target | $5,000 |
| Funded | $5K |
| Account | $100K |
| Contracts | 10 |
| Target | $10,000 |
| Funded | $10K |
All plans: real CME futures · same contracts in both phases · same trading power
ℹ️ Important nuance: Between the evaluation phase and the funded phase, the nominal account size on the TickWise dashboard changes. But the contract count stays identical — 3, 6 or 10 depending on your plan. Same contracts means same position sizes, same tick value, same trading power. The headline number changes. Your ability to trade the market doesn’t.
Useful background reading: our How It Works page walks through the 3-step structure, and https://blog.tickwisefunding.com/tickwise-vs-apex/ compares us against the other major futures prop firm if you want a like-for-like view.
Rules, Drawdown & The Capital Reality Test
FTMO is known for clean rules. We won’t pretend otherwise. They’ve refined their model over a decade and most traders find their criteria understandable. But there are two structural differences worth flagging.
🟢 TickWise — Futures, Real Capital
- Real CME futures contracts
- Allocated capital, not simulation
- Trailing drawdown (eval phase)
- No rules once funded
- Same contracts in both phases
- $25K → $2.5K · $50K → $5K · $100K → $10K
- Unlimited withdrawals, 90+ currencies + crypto
FTMO — CFDs, Demo Account
- CFDs on Forex, indices, metals, commodities
- Demo accounts (simulation)
- 5% max daily loss / 10% max overall
- Loss limits + rules continue when funded
- Same account size when funded
- 10K / 25K / 50K / 100K / 200K tiers
- 80% profit split (90% with Premium)
TickWise — Strengths
- Real allocated capital on real futures
- Guaranteed payouts, no denial games
- Unlimited withdrawals, no payout window
- Zero trading rules once funded
- Same contracts across both phases
- Cheaper at the 100K tier ($490 vs ~€540)
TickWise — Honest Limits
- Futures only — no Forex pairs or CFDs
- Launched 2026 — newer brand than FTMO
- Account sizes capped at $100K (for now)
- Requires CME-compatible futures platform
FTMO’s « funded » account is still a demo. That’s industry-standard for the CFD prop firm world — most of them operate this way — but it matters when you’re evaluating where your discipline really gets tested. At TickWise, your funded account uses TickWise’s allocated capital on the actual CME order book. Different model. Different reality.
💰 Get Funded On Real Futures →
Payouts & Withdrawals: The Test That Matters
This is where the philosophical gap between TickWise and FTMO becomes practical. Every prop firm sounds great until you ask to be paid.
Unlimited
TickWise Withdrawals
90+
Local Currencies
100+
Crypto Assets
Guaranteed
Every Payout
FTMO’s payout structure is the industry baseline: 80% profit split, scaling to 90% with Premium status. Payouts on a monthly cycle by default, with options for shorter windows. Most users report payouts arriving on schedule. The structure is fine. The split is fine. But the model is what it is — you wait for a cycle, you take a haircut, and your account stays a demo.
TickWise does it differently. Guaranteed payouts on real capital. Unlimited withdrawals whenever conditions are met, with no monthly window and no cap. Settlements in over 90 local currencies — useful if you’re not in a USD country — plus 100+ crypto assets including USDC, USDT and ETH. No artificial bottlenecks. No « your trading style is too inconsistent » excuses.
✅ Key Takeaway: A profit earned is a profit paid. TickWise doesn’t find reasons not to pay you. We don’t denounce FTMO’s payout record — they generally pay on time — but our model removes the windows, the caps and the split haircut entirely.
The Verdict: Which One Fits You?
This isn’t a « FTMO bad, TickWise good » article. Both firms serve real traders. The question is whether your edge lives in CFDs on Forex/indices or in futures on the CME order book. That decision picks the firm for you, not the other way around.
Choose FTMO if…
You trade Forex pairs, indices CFDs, or want exposure across multiple synthetic markets. You’re comfortable with demo-based « funding » and the 80/90% split. You’re not based in the US.
Choose TickWise if…
You trade futures — ES, NQ, CL, GC, MES, MNQ. You want real allocated capital on actual CME contracts. You want zero rules once funded, guaranteed payouts and unlimited withdrawals. You value transparency over brand age.
— TickWise Funding
FAQ
Is FTMO a futures prop firm?
No. FTMO offers CFDs on Forex pairs, indices, metals, energies and crypto. They do not offer access to listed futures contracts like those traded on CME. If you specifically want to trade ES, NQ, CL, GC and other CME futures, you need a futures-focused firm. That’s where TickWise sits.
Am I risking my own capital with TickWise?
With TickWise, you never risk your own capital beyond the evaluation fee. The evaluation fee — $190 for Starter, $290 for Pro, $490 for Expert — is one-time. Once funded, you trade with TickWise allocated capital, not your own bank account.
Why does the funded account size look smaller than the evaluation?
The nominal balance on your dashboard changes between phases (Pro evaluation $50K to funded $5K, Expert evaluation $100K to funded $10K). The number that actually controls your trading — the contract count — stays the same. Pro stays at 6 contracts, Expert stays at 10. Same position sizes, same tick value, same trading power.
Are TickWise payouts really unlimited?
Yes. Once funded, withdrawals are uncapped. Request payouts whenever conditions are met, with no artificial monthly limits and no cycle windows. Settlements happen in 90+ local currencies or 100+ crypto assets including USDC, USDT and ETH. Compare this to FTMO’s monthly-cycle model with an 80% standard split.
Can I trade Forex on TickWise?
No. TickWise focuses exclusively on futures listed on the CME — ES, NQ, CL, GC and other CME-listed contracts, including micros (MES, MNQ). If your edge is on Forex pairs, FTMO or another CFD-based firm will fit you better. We’d rather tell you upfront than waste your evaluation fee.
Does TickWise accept US traders?
Yes. TickWise is built for futures traders globally, including US residents. This is one of the structural reasons US-based traders gravitate to futures-focused firms — CFDs are restricted for retail in the US under CFTC and SEC rules, which limits access to firms like FTMO from US soil. Start an evaluation if that’s you.
A Simple Path to Funded Trading
Choose Evaluation
Select the account size that matches your trading style — Starter, Pro, or Expert.
Trade Safely
Focus on performance while respecting a clear, defined risk structure.
Get Funded
Access a funded account with allocated capital and trade with confidence.
Withdraw Profits
Request payouts freely — no withdrawal limits, 90+ currencies and crypto supported.
🚀 Get Funded On Real Futures →
⚠️ Risk Disclaimer: Trading futures involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Only trade with capital you can afford to lose. The information in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. TickWise Funding provides allocated capital through a structured evaluation process. Competitor data (FTMO pricing, profit splits, founding year, traffic) is based on publicly available information as of June 2026 and may change.
