Why these firms accept Singapore traders
Payment & regulatory notes for Singapore
Quick facts
Payment methods
Top 19 prop firms accepting Singapore traders

Alpha Futures
$750K

Earn2Trade
$1.2M

Lucid Trading
$750K

Tradeify
$750K

TradeDay
$150K

Funded Futures Network
$1.3M

E8 Futures
$750K

Purdia
$300K

FundedNext
$500K

Apex Trader Funding
$3M

Take Profit Trader
$750K

Phidias Prop Firm
$1M

Funded Futures Family
$150K

Bulenox
$2.8M
DayTraders
$1.5M

TradersLaunch
$900K

Blue Guardian
$150K

Legends Trading
$3M

FundedSeat
$750K
Singapore Prop Firms FAQ
Common questions about trading prop firms from Singapore — payment methods, restrictions, taxes, and which firms accept residents. Answers update automatically as our firm coverage changes.
Can I trade prop firms from Singapore?
Yes — 19 futures prop firms accept Singapore traders. Top-rated options include Alpha Futures, Earn2Trade, and Lucid Trading (+ 16 more). All firms listed have been editorially verified for payment processing and KYC compatibility with Singapore residents.
What's the best prop firm for Singapore traders?
Alpha Futures is currently the top-rated DamnPropFirms-trusted firm accepting Singapore traders, with a Trustpilot rating of 4.9 across 3,110 reviews. Other strong options include Earn2Trade and Lucid Trading (+ 16 more). See the full ranked list above for plan-by-plan pricing and DGT discounts.
Which prop firms accept Singapore traders?
The following 19 firms accept Singapore traders, ranked by editorial trust score:
- Alpha Futures ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.9★
- Earn2Trade ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.7★
- Lucid Trading ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.7★
- Tradeify ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.7★
- TradeDay ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.6★
- Funded Futures Network ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.6★
- E8 Futures ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.5★
- Purdia ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.5★
- FundedNext ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.4★
- Apex Trader Funding ★ DGT TRUSTED — 4.4★
+ 9 more — see full ranked list above.
Which prop firms restrict Singapore traders?
Excellent news — none of the firms we track currently restrict Singapore traders. All 19 verified firms above accept Singapore residents and process KYC + payouts normally.
How do prop firms pay Singapore traders?
Most prop firms pay Singapore traders via:
- Wire Transfer
- Wise
- PayPal
10 firms accepting Singapore traders offer daily payouts: Tradeify, TradeDay, Funded Futures Network, and FundedNext (+ 6 more). Daily payouts mean withdrawals process within 24 hours of request, vs the 1–7 day standard at most firms. Always verify the firm supports your preferred payout method before purchasing.
Are prop firm earnings taxable in Singapore?
Disclaimer: DamnPropFirms is not a tax advisor and this is not tax advice. Always consult a licensed accountant in Singapore for your specific situation.
Singaporean traders are accepted at all major prop firms. MAS has no jurisdiction over simulated trading. IRAS treats payouts as business income.
What's the cheapest prop firm for Singapore traders?
Bulenox currently has the lowest entry price at $18 (50K plan, after applying DGT discount code). Cheapest doesn't always mean best — consider the firm's payout reliability, drawdown rules, and consistency requirements before deciding. Check the ranked list above for the trust + price tradeoff.
Are there instant funding prop firms for Singapore traders?
Yes — 7 firms accepting Singapore traders offer instant funding: Lucid Trading, Tradeify, Purdia, and Funded Futures Family (+ 3 more). Instant funding skips the evaluation phase entirely; you get a live-funded account immediately upon purchase, often at a higher upfront cost but with faster path to payouts.
This is especially useful for experienced Singapore traders who don't want to spend 10–30 days proving themselves on an evaluation account. Trade-off: instant funding accounts typically have stricter consistency rules and lower payout caps initially.
Which prop firms have no consistency rule for Singapore traders?
9 firms accepting Singapore traders have no consistency rule: Alpha Futures, Lucid Trading, Tradeify, and TradeDay (+ 5 more). Consistency rules typically cap any single day's profit at 30–50% of total profit. Without this rule, you can have one huge winning day and still withdraw the full amount, which suits scalping and day trading strategies that produce uneven results.
This is one of the most-searched features in prop firm reviews — many traders fail evaluations not from losses, but from violating consistency rules with their best trading days.
Can I pass a prop firm evaluation in one day from Singapore?
Yes. 11 firms accepting Singapore traders allow you to pass an evaluation in a single trading day: Alpha Futures, Lucid Trading, Tradeify, and E8 Futures (+ 7 more). These firms have no minimum trading day requirement — if you hit the profit target without breaching drawdown rules, the evaluation passes immediately. For experienced Singapore traders confident in their setup, this means you can be funded within 24 hours of purchase. Always verify the exact profit target and drawdown rules in the firm's plan documentation before attempting a 1-day pass.
Everything Singapore Traders Need to Know About Prop Firms
The reality of trading prop firms from Singapore
Singapore's tax system is structurally different from every other country in this directory in one critical way: Singapore operates a territorial tax system, meaning income is generally taxable in Singapore only if it's sourced in Singapore or received in Singapore (with specific rules and exemptions). For Singapore tax residents earning prop firm payouts from foreign-domiciled firms (US-based Apex, Take Profit Trader, Tradeify, Lucid Trading; Cyprus-based FundedNext; UAE-based others), the relevant framework is the Foreign-Sourced Income Exemption (FSIE) under Section 13(8) of the Income Tax Act 1947. Under specific conditions, foreign-sourced income remitted to Singapore can be tax-exempt entirely.
The conditions matter and require precision. Section 13(9) requires three things to be met for FSIE: (1) the foreign income has been "subject to tax" in the source country (this can be satisfied through any foreign withholding, even if minimal — the test is whether the foreign jurisdiction had the right to tax, not whether tax was actually paid at meaningful rates), (2) the source country has a headline corporate tax rate of at least 15% (most major prop firm jurisdictions including the US satisfy this), and (3) the exemption must be beneficial to the taxpayer (which it almost always is for prop firm income). For most Singapore-resident prop firm traders earning USD payouts from US-based firms, all three conditions are met, making the income exempt from Singapore tax upon remittance.
The classification distinction that matters: foreign income that arises from a trade or business carried on IN Singapore is taxable in Singapore upon accrual, regardless of where it's received. This is the line Singapore-based prop firm traders need to walk carefully. If your trading activity is conducted from Singapore (your physical location, your computer infrastructure, your decision-making) using Singapore-based resources, IRAS may classify the activity as a Singapore-sourced trade or business — which makes FSIE inapplicable and the income fully taxable at Singapore's progressive resident rates from 0% to 24%. Talk to a Singapore-licensed tax advisor familiar with cross-border service income to structure this correctly.
Singapore's progressive personal income tax rates remain among the most competitive in Asia: 0% on the first S$20,000, then graduated brackets up to 24% on income above S$1 million. For YA 2026 (income earned in 2025), IRAS grants a Personal Income Tax Rebate of 60% of tax payable (capped at S$200), applied automatically. Even if your prop firm income is fully taxable in Singapore as Singapore-sourced trade income, the effective rate is dramatically lower than most developed markets. The currency reality also favors Singapore traders — the Singapore Dollar (SGD) has held value remarkably well against USD, currently trading around 1.32-1.35 SGD per USD. A USD $5,000 payout converts to approximately S$6,600-S$6,750 in your Singapore bank account.
The operational layer in Singapore is genuinely world-class. Major Singapore banks (DBS, OCBC, UOB, Standard Chartered Singapore, HSBC Singapore) all support multi-currency accounts and seamless USD-to-SGD conversion. Wise, Revolut, and other fintech platforms operate fully in Singapore. The MAS (Monetary Authority of Singapore) regulatory framework is mature and respected globally — though MAS doesn't directly regulate evaluation-based prop firms (which operate as foreign service providers from Singapore's perspective). The 9:30 AM EST New York open lands at 10:30 PM Singapore time (SGT, UTC+8) — late evening, similar to Filipino and Japanese traders, requiring schedule optimization around the NY session.
Payment processing for Singapore traders
Prop firms accepting Singapore traders typically support these payment methods for both deposits and payouts:
- Wire Transfer
- Wise
- PayPal
10 firms offer daily payouts for verified Singapore residents (within 24 hours of withdrawal request): Tradeify, TradeDay, Funded Futures Network, FundedNext. Daily payouts make a real difference for traders who depend on consistent withdrawal cadence — the alternative is 3-7 business day processing at most firms, which can create cash flow issues for full-time traders.
Note that all prop firms operate in USD, not SGD (Singapore). Withdrawals convert at the time of payout, so exchange rate movements affect your net take-home. For larger withdrawals (over $5,000 USD equivalent), traders typically use Wise or Rise to lock in better conversion rates than wire transfers offer.
Regulatory and tax context for Singapore
Singaporean traders are accepted at all major prop firms. MAS has no jurisdiction over simulated trading. IRAS treats payouts as business income.
Tax disclaimer: Prop firm payouts are typically classified as self-employment or business income in most jurisdictions, including Singapore. We are not tax advisors — consult a licensed accountant familiar with foreign-source income rules in your country before withdrawing significant amounts.
Best prop firms for Singapore traders by use case
Different traders need different things. Here's how the firms accepting Singapore residents stack up across the most common use cases:
- Best for low capital starting out
- Bulenox — entry plan from $18 after DGT discount. The lowest barrier to entry among firms accepting Singapore traders. Trade-off: smaller initial account size means slower scaling.
- Best for skipping evaluations
- Lucid Trading — instant funding accounts available. You pay more upfront but get a live-capital account immediately, no 10-30 day evaluation phase. Suits experienced traders confident in their edge.
- Best for irregular trading patterns
- Alpha Futures — no consistency rule means one big winning day doesn't lock you out of withdrawals. Critical for scalpers, news traders, and anyone whose strategy produces uneven daily P&L distribution.
- Best for long-term reliability
- Alpha Futures — DamnPropFirms-trusted, with a Trustpilot rating of 4.9 based on verified trader feedback. Multi-year track record of consistent payouts, the safest pick for traders prioritizing capital preservation over maximum upside.
- Best for scalpers
- Alpha Futures — explicitly allows scalping with no minimum holding time. Many firms quietly disqualify scalping at payout time even when their rules don't prohibit it; firms with explicit scalping permission have cleaner withdrawal records.
- Best for algorithmic traders
- Tradeify — automated trading and EAs explicitly permitted. If you trade algorithmically, this matters more than any other feature: most firms flag bot activity at payout time even when the rules technically allow it.
Common pitfalls for Singapore traders
Singapore's structural advantages for prop firm income are genuine, but they come with classification questions that determine whether you actually capture the FSIE benefit or end up taxed normally. Here are the considerations that matter most.
The "trade or business carried on in Singapore" classification trap
This is the single most important question for Singapore-resident prop firm traders. IRAS distinguishes between foreign-sourced income (potentially eligible for FSIE) and Singapore-sourced trade or business income (fully taxable at progressive rates). The line between these is genuinely subtle for prop firm traders because: (1) you trade from Singapore physical location, (2) the firms you trade with are foreign-domiciled, and (3) the activity itself is global market participation through foreign-based entities.
The factors IRAS considers when determining "trade or business carried on in Singapore" include the location of decision-making, where contracts are negotiated, where the activity actually generates value, and the substance of the operation. For a Singapore-based individual trading prop firm accounts from their home office in Singapore, IRAS may reasonably argue this is a Singapore-sourced trade — making the income fully taxable at progressive rates rather than FSIE-exempt. The honest answer for most Singapore prop firm traders: your income is likely taxable as Singapore-sourced trade income, not exempt as foreign-sourced. The good news is Singapore's progressive rates (0-24%) are competitive enough that even fully-taxable treatment beats most developed markets. Talk to a Singapore-licensed tax advisor (PwC, Deloitte, or a specialized boutique firm) before assuming FSIE applies — the structuring requirements to genuinely qualify are stricter than many traders assume.
Filing requirements and the no-filing arrangement (NFS) reality
Singapore residents typically file annual income tax returns by April 15 (paper) or April 18 (e-filing). Many salaried employees are on IRAS's Auto-Inclusion Scheme (AIS) and may receive a "no-filing service" notification, but this typically does NOT cover prop firm trading income. Prop firm income from foreign sources must be declared via Form B (for taxpayers with business income) regardless of whether you receive an NFS notification. Failing to file when required carries late filing penalties — typically 5% of unpaid tax for the first month, escalating thereafter.
The relevant form for most Singapore prop firm traders is Form B (Income Tax Return for Individuals with Business Income) rather than Form B1 (standard salaried employee form). If your prop firm income is your primary or significant income source, registering as a sole proprietor with ACRA (Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority) provides additional structure — though for many prop firm traders, sole proprietorship adds administrative overhead without meaningful tax benefit at typical income levels. Above S$200,000-300,000 annual prop firm net profit, considering a Singapore Pte Ltd structure becomes worthwhile — Singapore corporate tax is a flat 17% with significant rebates for new companies (the Start-Up Tax Exemption scheme provides 75% exemption on the first S$100,000 and 50% on the next S$100,000 for the first three years).
The CRS reporting reality and remittance documentation
Singapore is a fully participating CRS (Common Reporting Standard) jurisdiction — IRAS receives automatic data on Singapore-resident foreign account holdings and exchanges Singapore-resident financial information with foreign tax authorities. Wise, Payoneer, Deel, and most major payment platforms report Singapore-resident accounts directly to IRAS annually. For prop firm traders, this means your foreign-source payout flows are visible to IRAS in near-real-time, which makes compliance the only viable strategy.
The right move is straightforward: declare prop firm payouts on Form B as business income (assuming Singapore-sourced classification), claim every legitimate deductible business expense (challenge fees, reset fees, TradingView subscription, internet and home office portion, professional fees), submit Form W-8BEN to your prop firm to avoid US tax withholding, and use the US-Singapore tax treaty to claim foreign tax credits if any US tax was nonetheless withheld. For high-volume traders genuinely structuring foreign-sourced income for FSIE qualification, document everything: contracts with prop firms (clearly establishing them as foreign service providers), evidence of where decision-making occurs, and remittance records showing when funds enter Singapore. Singapore's tax system rewards precision and punishes vagueness — the cleaner your documentation, the cleaner your tax position.
How to choose the right prop firm as a Singapore trader
With 19 firms to choose from, the decision framework matters more than picking a "best" firm:
- Start with capital comfort. Don't buy a $1M evaluation if you can't afford to fail and rebuy. Most traders fail their first 1-3 evaluations regardless of skill — budget accordingly.
- Match the rules to your strategy. Daily limits, consistency rules, and minimum trading days create real drag for some strategies. A scalper trying to pass a firm with a 50% consistency rule will fail repeatedly.
- Verify payment processor support for Singapore. A firm that "accepts" your country in their ToS may still have payment friction at signup or payout. The firms above are verified for working payment paths to Singapore residents.
- Read the fine print on payouts. Daily payouts mean nothing if the firm has a 30-day waiting period before your first one. Check the actual payout schedule, not just the marketing claims.
- Test small first. Even with a verified firm, run your first $50K-$100K evaluation before committing to larger sizes. Real-money testing surfaces issues the marketing doesn't.
For most Singapore traders new to prop firm trading, Alpha Futures is the safest starting point. Once you have one verified payout cycle complete, scaling to additional firms or larger account sizes makes sense.
Important: This is not financial or tax advice
Everything above is general educational information about how futures prop firm income may be classified and operationalized for Singapore residents in 2026. Tax law, regulatory frameworks, and banking practices change constantly, and the right answer for your specific situation depends on factors this article cannot account for — your other income sources, residency status, family situation, expected income level, and many others.
Before making any tax, regulatory, or structural decisions, consult a licensed Singapore tax advisor, accountant, or attorney familiar with foreign-source service income and prop firm trading specifically. The cost of professional advice is trivial compared to the cost of getting structure wrong. Damn Prop Firms is not a licensed financial advisor, tax advisor, or attorney in Singapore or any other jurisdiction. We provide affiliate-supported educational content, not personalized professional advice.
Trading futures involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all participants. Author claims about personal trading performance reflect specific historical experiences and do not represent typical results — most prop firm traders do not become consistently profitable. Some links on this page are affiliate links and we may receive compensation when you sign up through them — this never affects our editorial recommendations.
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