Tradeify currently shows 4 headline account sizes in our review data, from $10,000 up to $100,000. The visible price range runs from From $99 to From $499, but the real cost picture depends on which of the firm's 1 program types you choose: 1-Step Evaluation.
Tradeify mainly presents its evaluation fees as upfront challenge purchases rather than recurring monthly subscriptions. We do not treat the fee as refundable unless the firm's own terms make that explicit.
Tradeify also has an active promotion at the time of review: DASH for 40% off. That can materially change the effective entry cost compared with the list price.
| Program | Published Price Points |
|---|---|
| Growth | Varies by contract size |
| Select | Varies by contract size |
| Lightning (Instant) | Direct Funding options available |
Tradeify's extended pricing data shows separate published amounts by program rather than one flat challenge ladder. That matters because the cheapest route into the ecosystem is not always the same as the best value route once you compare drawdown rules and payout terms.
Tradeify's value proposition is not just the sticker price. The more relevant question is what you get for the entry cost in terms of account scale, rule flexibility, payout access, and platform fit. In the current dataset, the fee range is From $99 to From $499, the maximum advertised allocation is $150,000, and the firm supports NinjaTrader, Tradovate, Rithmic.
For traders comparing multiple prop firms, that usually means Tradeify is strongest when its rule structure and payout terms line up with your style. A cheaper fee can still be the worse deal if the drawdown model or payout cadence is less usable for the way you trade.
Tradeify offers 1 challenge format: 1-Step Evaluation. That makes a big pricing difference because instant programs, one-step programs, and multi-step evaluations usually target different trader profiles and risk tolerances.
Because Tradeify is still evaluation-led, traders should compare the cost against the attached profit target, daily loss rule, and payout delay rather than reading the challenge fee in isolation.