Real Trading Support. Real Community. Zero Fluff.

Stop navigating the markets alone. We provide the steady guidance and honest feedback you need to build a trading life that actually lasts.

Your Free Toolkit

Watch the presentation to understand the variables you can actually control in the market, then download our workbook to audit your process.

“If this felt grounding, Course 1 is where we build this skill step by step.”
— No pressure. No hype. Just alignment.

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For each statement, choose a number from 1 to 5

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Course Stack

Introduction To Trading

Book + Workbook aligned

What trading is, expectations, overview, foundational concepts. No deep mechanics. No trade management.

What Trading Is

Trading Process & Trade Management

Book + Workbook aligned

How Traders Manage Themselves & Trades

How trades are handled:

Technical Analysis & Chart Reading

Book + Workbook aligned

How to find trades:

Introduction To Trading

Book + Workbook aligned

What trading is, expectations, overview, foundational concepts. No deep mechanics. No trade management.

What Trading Is

Day Trading FAQs

Is $100 enough for day trading?

No, not for real day trading.

With $100, you can’t realistically manage risk, absorb normal losses, or follow proper
position sizing. What is possible with $100 is learning. Paper trading or simulator
accounts let you practice reading charts, placing orders, and managing trades without
financial pressure.

Think of small capital as tuition, not income. The goal early on is skill, not profit.

How much does the average day trader make?

There isn’t a meaningful “average.”

Most beginners lose money while learning. Many traders work toward consistency first.
From there, some grow into part-time or full-time income, depending on their goals and
commitment. Day trading doesn’t pay you for effort or intelligence. It pays you for
process, discipline, and risk control.

Anyone promising an average daily income is skipping the uncomfortable truth: results
vary widely, and consistency takes time.

Why do you need $25,000 to be a day trader?

That rule applies to U.S. stock traders, not all markets.

The Pattern Day Trader (PDT) rule requires $25,000 in a margin account if you day trade
stocks in the U.S. Futures, forex, and some international markets follow different rules.
This is one reason many traders start by learning first, choosing one market, and
building skill before worrying about account size.

Can you make $200 a day trading?

Yes, some traders can. For many, it’s a goal that becomes realistic after building a solid
foundation. What matters most is learning to trade well before focusing on daily income
goals.

Focusing on a daily dollar goal is one of the fastest ways to overtrade and break rules.
Professional traders focus on executing their plan well, not forcing income from the
market.

Consistency comes from managing losses first. Profits are the byproduct, not the
target.

Day trading is not easy money, fast money, or guaranteed money.

It is a skill. One that can be learned, practiced, and improved over time with structure, patience, and the right expectations.

That’s exactly how we teach it.

Ready to start your journey?

Book a 15-minute discovery call to see if our community is the right fit for you.