Audacity Capital vs OneFunded - Prop Firm Comparison (March 2026)

Head-to-head comparison of Audacity Capital and OneFunded. Check max funding, profit splits, daily and overall drawdown rules, leverage, tradable assets, payout frequency, payment and payout methods, trading permissions and KYC restrictions before you buy a challenge. Data refreshed March 2026.

Audacity Capital vs OneFunded - Prop Firm Comparison (March 2026)
Audacity Capital
Audacity Capital is a proprietary trading firm founded in 2012 in London that offers multiple funding paths including the Ability Challenge evaluation and a Funded Trader Program, advertising accounts up to $2,000,000, profit share up to 90%, and trading via...
OneFunded
OneFunded is a UK‑based proprietary trading firm launched in 2024 under Brynex Tech Limited. It offers evaluation‑based simulated trading accounts with unlimited time to pass; the main programs are the 1‑Step Challenge, 2‑Step Challenge and 1F Limited challenge. Traders work on the...
Overview
Trustpilot Rating 0 4.4
Trustpilot Reviews 0 185
Headquarters United Kingdom United Kingdom
Age (Years) 14 2
Max Funding $2,000,000 $200,000
Profit Split Start 50% 80%
Profit Split Max 90% 90%
Platforms MT5 TradeLocker cTrader
Assets Forex Commodities Forex indices commodities (metals & energies) cryptocurrencies
Leverage
FX Leverage 100 100
Metals Leverage 100 30
Crypto Leverage 2 2
Risk & Drawdown Rules
Max Daily Loss Maximum Daily LossAbility Challenge uses a static daily drawdown that resets at rollover (00:00 GMT+2): 7.5% during the Challenge stage and 5% during the Verification stage. Audacity also states the Ability Live phase daily drawdown is 5%. The Funded Trader Program (FTP) uses a 5% trailing daily drawdown (moves up with equity highs). 4–5
Max Total Loss Maximum Overall LossAbility Challenge maximum drawdown is 15% in the Challenge stage and 10% in the Verification stage (and the firm also references a 10% maximum drawdown in the Ability Live phase). FTP maximum total drawdown is 10% from the initial balance. Ability One lists a 6% absolute drawdown. 6–11
Drawdown Type Drawdown ModelAudacity's Ability Challenge and Verification stages are described as using a static drawdown system with daily limits resetting at rollover (00:00 GMT+2). FTP uses a trailing drawdown model (daily DD 5% trailing). Ability One uses static drawdown (3% daily and 6% absolute). Fixed (daily 4–5 % and overall 6–11 % of starting balance)
Payouts
Payout Frequency Payout FrequencyAbility Challenge: first payout can be requested 30 days after the first trade on the Ability Live account, then payouts may be requested bi-weekly. FTP: payouts can be requested once a 10% profit milestone is reached (profit share varies by account size and time-to-target). Payouts can be requested every 14 days in the funded stage (or weekly with an add‑on). Bi‑weekly and weekly cycles provide up to a 90 % profit split.
Days to First Payout 30 14
Payout Processing Time 14 2
Payout Methods Bank Transfer PayPal Cryptocurrency USDT TRC20 Bank transfer
Payments
Payment Methods Credit/Debit Card PayPal Cryptocurrency Credit/debit card (Visa Mastercard) Google Pay Apple Pay Crypto (USDT TRC20) Bank transfer
Trading Permissions
News Trading Ability Challenge: news trading is permitted during news events in both challenge phases and on the Ability Live account. FTP: holding open positions is prohibited during significant news events; traders must wait 30 minutes after the release once notified by the risk team. News trading is allowed in both evaluation and funded stages. A high‑impact news window (5 minutes before and after the event) requires careful risk management; trades may be opened, modified or closed but abusing volatility may result in warnings or termination.
Weekend Trades Allowed: Ability Challenge (including Ability Live) allows weekend holding; Ability One also allows weekend holding, subject to drawdown limits. Overnight and weekend positions are allowed across all stages. Swap/rollover fees apply where relevant.
Copy Trading Audacity Capital allows copy trading, subject to specific restrictions designed to ensure that all trades originate from the trader’s own strategy and accounts. Permitted Copy Trading Own Accounts: Copying trades between your own Audacity Capital accounts is permitted. External Personal Accounts: Copying trades from your personal trading accounts with other brokers or prop firms into your Audacity Capital account is allowed. Verification of the source account may be required. EAs / Automated Systems: Expert Advisors and other automated trading tools... Copy trading is permitted only between your own OneFunded accounts. Coordinated copy trading with other traders or social copy services is prohibited.
EA Allowed EA Guidelines and Restrictions Permitted Use: Expert Advisors (EAs) are generally allowed on MetaTrader 5 (MT5) for both the Ability Challenge and the Funded Trader Program. Prohibited EA Strategies: The following automated trading styles are strictly forbidden and may result in account termination: High-Frequency Trading (HFT) and Tick Scalping: Not permitted. Martingale or Averaging Down Strategies: Not permitted. Latency Arbitrage: Any form of latency arbitrage or exploitation of system vulnerabilities is strictly prohibited. Grid Trading: Not permitted. Third-Party EAs: While... Expert Advisors (EAs) and automated strategies are allowed, but traders must request approval via the support desk and provide details of the EA’s logic.
KYC & Restrictions
KYC Required No No
KYC Stage KYC is required before account activation and again before processing payouts. Audacity states KYC includes proof of identity (government-issued photo ID) and a selfie, and may need to be resubmitted for compliance. KYC/AML verification is required after completing the evaluation and before receiving funded account credentials and payouts. Traders must submit proof of identity, proof of address and a selfie.
Restricted Countries Bangladesh Belarus Burma (Myanmar) Central African Republic Crimea Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine Cuba Democratic Republic of the Congo Iran Iraq Lebanon Libya North Korea Pakistan Russia Somalia Sudan Syria United States and its territories (including American Samoa Guam Northern Mariana Islands Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands) Venezuela Yemen Afghanistan Belarus Central African Republic Cuba Democratic Republic of the Congo Eritrea Guinea‑Bissau Iran Iraq ISIL (Da’esh) Lebanon Libya Mali North Korea Russia (including Crimea/Donetsk/Luhansk) Somalia South Sudan Sudan Syria Taliban Yemen Zimbabwe