Rev One Trading GlassPay Explained: Pool Math, Multipliers, and Boosts (2026)

PaulWritten by Paul Last updated: Apr 8, 2026Trust

Rev One Trading's GlassPay allocates 40 percent of company revenue to a Trader Payout Pool with 85 percent paid to traders and 15 percent kept as reserve. Your share depends on 8 behavioral multipliers that set your Performance Weight, plus optional Silver and Gold boosts. Here is the full math and how to optimize for it.

Rev One Trading's GlassPay is one of the most unusual payout systems in the prop space. Where most firms pay a fixed percentage of individual trader profit, GlassPay pays from a shared revenue pool weighted by trader behavior. The model exists to align trader and firm incentives, but the math is more complex than an 80/20 split, and traders who do not understand how their behavior affects the pool share can be surprised by the size of their payouts.

This guide walks the full GlassPay mechanic: the 40 percent revenue allocation, the 85/15 pool split, the 8 behavioral multipliers, the Performance Weight calculation, the Silver and Gold boost economics, and the practical optimization patterns.

What Is GlassPay?

GlassPay is Rev One Trading's branded name for its revenue-share payout system. Instead of paying a fixed percentage of each trader's individual profit, the firm pools a portion of company revenue and distributes it weekly to eligible traders based on their relative Performance Weight.

The model has two structural features that distinguish it from standard prop firm payouts: the pool is fed by firm revenue not by individual trader losses, and the share each trader receives depends on behavior metrics not just profit volume. Both features are designed to align trader and firm incentive.

The Pool Math: 40 Percent Revenue, 85/15 Split

Rev One Trading allocates 40 percent of total company revenue to the GlassPay Trader Payout Pool. Of that 40 percent, 85 percent is distributed to eligible traders and 15 percent is held in an operational reserve fund. The pool resets weekly with payouts processed every Friday.

Revenue layerPercentagePurpose
Total company revenue100 percentBaseline pool source
Allocated to GlassPay pool40 percentReserved for trader payouts
Distributed to traders85 percent of poolWeekly disbursement
Operational reserve15 percent of poolLiquidity buffer
Reset cadenceWeeklyFriday payouts

The 85/15 split inside the pool is one of the more aggressive trader-favorable allocations in the revenue-share segment. Many similar models reserve 20 to 30 percent for operations. The 15 percent reserve at Rev One is positioned as a liquidity buffer rather than a profit margin.

Important caveat: the actual revenue figures and pool amounts rely on the firm's self-reporting. No external audit mechanism is in place as of this writing, so traders should treat the formula as published policy rather than independently verified data.

The 8 Behavioral Multipliers

Your share of the GlassPay pool is not determined by raw profit. It is determined by your Performance Weight, which is the product of 8 separate behavioral multipliers. Each multiplier generates a value (typically 0.65x to 1.5x) and the final Performance Weight is the multiplication of all 8.

MultiplierWhat It MeasuresKey Detail
ConsistencyHow evenly your daily P&L is distributedPenalizes accounts where one big day dominates total profit
ScalpingTrade duration and frequency patternsVery short hold times may reduce this multiplier
News TradingTrading activity around high-impact news eventsHeavy news-event trading can lower this multiplier
Trading DaysNumber of active trading days per cycle3 to 4 days equals 0.65x, more days raises the multiplier
Peak DrawdownMaximum drawdown reached during the cycleDeeper drawdowns reduce your PW
Account SizeThe size of your funded accountLarger accounts carry more weight in the pool
Payout NumberHow many payouts you have received historicallyRewards long-term repeat traders
Profit TierYour profit level relative to the account sizeHigher percentage gains equal higher multiplier

The architecture is deliberately multiplicative rather than additive. A single bad multiplier (for example 0.65x on Trading Days) can pull the entire Performance Weight down regardless of how strong the other 7 are. This is the structural reason the model rewards balanced behavior over specialized intensity.

How Performance Weight Is Calculated

Performance Weight (PW) is calculated by multiplying all 8 multipliers together. The result is a single number that represents your relative weight in the pool. If your PW is 2.0 and another trader's PW is 1.0, you receive twice their share of the pool for the same realized profit.

Sample calculation for a balanced trader running an evaluation-friendly profile:

MultiplierValueRunning PW
Consistency1.101.10
Scalping1.001.10
News Trading1.001.10
Trading Days1.201.32
Peak Drawdown1.051.39
Account Size1.101.53
Payout Number1.101.68
Profit Tier1.151.93

The same trader with a 0.65x Trading Days multiplier (3 active days instead of 5+) would see Performance Weight drop from 1.93 to about 1.04. Same profit, very different pool share. The multiplicative structure is what makes a single low value so consequential.

The Trading Days Multiplier in Detail

Trading Days is the single multiplier traders underestimate most. A trader who trades 3 to 4 days during a weekly cycle sits at 0.65x, which is the biggest single-multiplier discount available. Trading 5 or more days raises the multiplier into neutral or positive territory.

Rev One offers a Reduced Min Trading Days add-on for 20 percent of base price that lowers the minimum to 3 days without the penalty. This is positioned for swing traders whose strategies naturally produce fewer trading days, and it functionally replaces the 0.65x penalty with a one-time cost.

Practical math: if your account base price is 500 dollars and the add-on costs 100 dollars, that 100 dollars saves you the 35 percent PW discount on every payout cycle. Over 4 cycles of decent profit the add-on typically pays for itself.

Silver Boost and Gold Boost

Rev One offers two purchasable boosts that act as final-PW multipliers on top of the 8 behavioral multipliers. Silver Boost doubles (2x) your final Performance Weight and costs 30 percent of the account base price. Gold Boost quadruples (4x) your final PW and costs 50 percent of base price.

BoostPW effectCost (percent of base)Effective break-even
No boost1.0x base0 percentBaseline
Silver Boost2.0x base30 percentAbout 2 profitable cycles
Gold Boost4.0x base50 percentAbout 1 to 2 profitable cycles

Both boosts are purchased at checkout only and apply permanently to that account for every payout cycle the account remains active. The economics favor traders who plan to run the account through multiple payout cycles, because the boost cost is fixed but the benefit compounds.

Individual Multiplier Boosts

Beyond Silver and Gold, Rev One also offers Individual Multiplier Boosts that target specific behavioral multipliers. The most common is the Scalping boost at 7.5 percent of base price, which adds a 1.25x bonus to the Scalping multiplier.

Individual boosts make sense for traders whose strategy is structurally penalized on one multiplier (very short hold times for scalpers, heavy news exposure for event traders) but who do not need the full 2x or 4x of Silver and Gold. The trade-off is that all boosts must be purchased at checkout, so the trader needs to know their strategy profile before buying the account.

Worked Example: Two Traders, Same Profit

Two Rev One funded traders close the week at the same 2,000 dollar profit on identical 50K accounts. Trader A spread profit across 5 days with one mid-cycle 30 percent drawdown peak. Trader B made all 2,000 dollars on day 1 with one large trade and held no further positions.

MultiplierTrader ATrader B
Consistency1.100.75
Scalping1.001.00
News Trading1.001.00
Trading Days1.200.65
Peak Drawdown0.901.10
Account Size1.001.00
Payout Number1.051.05
Profit Tier1.101.10
Final PW1.350.62

Trader A receives more than twice the pool share of Trader B despite identical profit. The model rewards the trader who showed consistency and trading days, even though Trader B took less drawdown. This is the core behavioral incentive GlassPay encodes.

Payout Cadence and Methods

GlassPay processes payouts weekly on Fridays. There are no 30-day waiting cycles and no minimum payout thresholds advertised. Payments are made in USDT, USDC, BTC or ETH on the published settlement chains.

Rev One Trading claims no payout caps, meaning there is no maximum amount you can receive in a single payout. The actual amount depends on pool size that week and your Performance Weight relative to other active traders.

MechanicDetail
CadenceWeekly, every Friday
Payment railsUSDT, USDC, BTC, ETH
Minimum payoutNone advertised
Maximum payout capNone advertised
Pool resetWeekly with the Friday cycle

Eligibility and Add-Ons

To be eligible for a GlassPay payout in a given week, the trader must have an active funded account in good standing and have generated realized profit during the cycle. The 8 multipliers are calculated automatically on the trade-data feed.

Optional add-ons at checkout:

  • Reduced Min Trading Days add-on (20 percent of base) lowers the Trading Days threshold to 3 days without the 0.65x penalty.
  • Silver Boost (30 percent of base) applies a permanent 2x to final PW.
  • Gold Boost (50 percent of base) applies a permanent 4x to final PW.
  • Individual Multiplier Boost for Scalping (7.5 percent of base) adds 1.25x to the Scalping multiplier.
  • Additional Individual Multiplier Boosts may apply to specific behavioral multipliers, verify in checkout.

All add-ons must be selected before completing the order. They cannot be added, removed or modified after purchase. Plan the add-on profile against your trading strategy before checkout because there is no path to retrofit.

Multi-Cycle Performance Weight Tracking

The Payout Number multiplier rewards traders who remain active across multiple weekly cycles. This is one of the few multipliers that compounds over time without requiring per-cycle behavior changes. A trader who completes 10 payout cycles has materially higher PW than a brand-new funded trader, all else equal.

Practical implication: maintaining a steady weekly presence pays dividends beyond the immediate cycle. Sitting out 2 to 3 cycles to wait for ideal market conditions costs cumulative PW progression even if no individual cycle was traded poorly. The model favors active traders over opportunistic ones.

Payout cycles completedEstimated multiplier valueCumulative PW benefit
1 to 3 cyclesAbout 1.00xBaseline
4 to 6 cyclesAbout 1.05xSmall uplift
7 to 10 cyclesAbout 1.10xMeaningful uplift
10 plus cycles1.10x plusCompounding advantage over new traders

Verify exact multiplier curves on the Rev One dashboard because the firm may update specific values. The directional pattern (more cycles equals higher multiplier) is stable; the exact slope may shift with policy updates.

Boost Selection by Trading Profile

The right boost depends on your trading profile and expected account life. Three common scenarios:

Short-Term Account (1 to 2 Cycles Expected)

Skip Silver and Gold Boost. The break-even math does not work because the boost cost is fixed but the benefit accrues per cycle. If you plan to run 1 to 2 cycles only, the upfront cost typically exceeds the PW lift across that short horizon.

Medium-Term Account (3 to 6 Cycles Expected)

Silver Boost is the sweet spot at 30 percent of base. The 2x final PW multiplier across 3 to 6 cycles typically produces meaningfully higher cumulative payouts than the base-price option. Gold Boost can still pay off but the marginal benefit over Silver is less pronounced at this horizon.

Long-Term Account (7 plus Cycles Expected)

Gold Boost is the right choice for traders confident in long-term account viability. The 4x final PW multiplier compounds across many cycles. Combined with the Payout Number multiplier rising over the same horizon, Gold Boost on a long-running account can roughly double cumulative payouts compared to the no-boost path.

Combining Boosts with Add-Ons

Boosts stack with add-ons. A trader running a scalping strategy on a long-term account might combine Gold Boost (50 percent of base) plus Individual Multiplier Boost for Scalping (7.5 percent) for a total 57.5 percent upfront cost premium. The combined effect is 4x final PW plus 1.25x on the Scalping multiplier before the 4x final is applied.

CombinationTotal upfront costFinal PW effectStrategy fit
No boost, no add-on0 percent premium1.0x baseBaseline
Reduced Min Trading Days only20 percentRemoves 0.65x penaltySwing traders
Silver only30 percent2x finalMedium-term, balanced
Gold only50 percent4x finalLong-term, balanced
Silver plus Scalping Boost37.5 percent2x final, 1.25x ScalpingMedium-term scalpers
Gold plus Scalping Boost57.5 percent4x final, 1.25x ScalpingLong-term scalpers

The combination math gets complex fast. Use the dashboard checkout calculator if available; do not rely on hand math for stacked decisions because the multipliers interact in non-obvious ways depending on which behavioral multipliers are at the low end of your profile.

Risk Caveats Specific to Pool Models

Pool-based payout models introduce risks that fixed-split models do not. Traders should weigh these explicitly before committing to a Rev One account:

  • Variable payout amounts even at constant performance, because the pool itself fluctuates week to week with firm revenue.
  • Competition with other active traders, because the pool is divided by total PW across all eligible traders.
  • Limited transparency into pool size or competitor PW, only your own PW is visible.
  • Dependence on firm health and ongoing revenue, a quiet revenue month reduces pool size for everyone.
  • Boost purchases lock in cost regardless of future pool performance.

GlassPay Versus a Traditional 80/20 Split

The structural difference is that GlassPay pays from a shared pool weighted by behavior, while an 80/20 model pays 80 percent of your individual profit regardless of behavior. Three concrete implications follow:

DimensionGlassPay80/20 split
Pool source40 percent of firm revenueTrader's own profit
Payout predictabilityVariable, depends on pool size and other tradersHighly predictable
Incentive alignmentRewards consistency and trading daysRewards profit volume only
Audit transparencySelf-reported, no third-party audit yetTransparent per-trade calculation
Boost economicsSilver and Gold boosts availableNo equivalent mechanic

GlassPay claims better incentive alignment since payouts come from revenue rather than trader losses, but the trade-off is less per-cycle predictability for the trader. For high-volume profit traders who already trade consistently across many days, the math can be favorable. For low-volume specialists, an 80/20 model may produce more predictable income.

Optimizing Your GlassPay Performance Weight

Five practical adjustments that improve PW on most accounts:

  • Trade at least 5 days per weekly cycle to avoid the 0.65x Trading Days penalty, even if some days are small trades.
  • Distribute profit evenly across days rather than concentrating in 1 or 2 big sessions, the Consistency multiplier rewards distribution.
  • Manage drawdown tightly during the cycle, the Peak Drawdown multiplier penalizes intra-cycle equity dips even if you recover.
  • Build payout history by remaining active across multiple cycles, the Payout Number multiplier compounds over time.
  • Match the boost selection to your strategy: scalpers should consider the Individual Scalping Boost, swing traders should consider Reduced Min Trading Days.

The single highest-leverage optimization is trading day count. Going from 4 days to 5 days per cycle shifts the multiplier from 0.65x toward 1.0x or higher, which can roughly double the final PW depending on the other multipliers. No boost purchase replicates that effect.

Risk and Transparency Considerations

A few honest caveats traders should weigh before committing to a GlassPay-based account:

  • The pool size depends on the firm's revenue, which is not independently audited.
  • Performance Weight is calculated by the firm, so trust in the underlying math is required.
  • Weekly variability means the same Performance Weight can produce different absolute payouts week to week.
  • Boost purchases are non-refundable and apply only to the account they are bought on.
  • Strategy fit matters more than at fixed-split firms because the model penalizes some natural trader profiles.

None of these caveats invalidate the model, but they should inform the decision to use Rev One versus a fixed-split competitor. Trader transparency expectations differ across the prop segment.

Bottom Line

GlassPay is a behaviorally weighted revenue-share payout system. The pool is 40 percent of firm revenue split 85 to traders and 15 to reserve. Your share is determined by Performance Weight, the product of 8 behavioral multipliers, optionally boosted by Silver (2x), Gold (4x) or Individual Multiplier Boosts purchased at checkout.

The model favors traders who distribute profit across multiple days, manage drawdown tightly and remain active over many payout cycles. It penalizes traders whose edge concentrates in 1 or 2 fat days, short scalping patterns or heavy news-event exposure unless those profiles are offset with the matching Individual Multiplier Boost.

For new Rev One traders the practical playbook is to plan the trading schedule around 5+ active days per weekly cycle, consider the Reduced Min Trading Days add-on if the strategy is structurally fewer-day, and evaluate Silver Boost economics against your expected cycle count on the account.

Verifying GlassPay Calculations in the Dashboard

Rev One's trader dashboard exposes each multiplier individually after every payout cycle. Reviewing the breakdown is the cheapest way to identify which multiplier is dragging the Performance Weight and which behavior change would have the biggest impact on the next cycle.

Standard review workflow after each Friday payout:

  • Note the cycle profit and the final Performance Weight calculated by the system.
  • Compare each individual multiplier value against the prior cycle to identify trends.
  • Identify the lowest-value multiplier and consider whether the underlying behavior is changeable.
  • Project the PW improvement of changing that behavior, multiply through the other 7 to estimate cycle impact.
  • Adjust the trading plan for the next cycle accordingly, focusing on the single highest-leverage change.

The single-highest-leverage change is usually Trading Days for traders below 5 active days per cycle. After that, Consistency and Peak Drawdown tend to dominate as the next adjustable levers.

GlassPay Pool Variability and Cash Flow Planning

Because payouts depend on weekly pool size, cash flow planning at Rev One looks different from fixed-split firms. Traders should not assume any specific dollar amount per cycle until they have several cycles of personal data.

Practical cash flow guidance:

  • Run the first 4 to 6 cycles before drawing conclusions about expected per-cycle payout.
  • Track payout volatility (standard deviation across cycles) not just the mean.
  • Budget for the 20th percentile cycle, not the average, to avoid cash flow stress.
  • Reserve a portion of each payout to smooth across low-pool weeks.
  • Reassess the boost economics after 8 to 10 cycles with personal data.

The structural reality is that Rev One trader cash flow is variable in a way most prop firms are not. Traders who require predictable income should weigh this against the per-cycle upside the model can produce in strong weeks.

Practical Trader FAQs Beyond the Rule Book

Beyond the published rules, traders working through GlassPay multipliers typically have a recurring set of practical questions that the help center does not directly address. Most of them resolve to a small handful of principles.

How to Build Confidence in the Mechanic

Confidence comes from explicit testing. Run a small position through the mechanic in question, verify the dashboard behavior matches the published rule, and only scale up once the mechanic is confirmed. Most traders skip this validation step and discover edge cases on a serious account, which is the expensive way to learn.

How to Document Edge Cases

When a rule produces an unexpected outcome, screenshot the dashboard immediately, note the timestamp and the exact trade or event that triggered it, and submit a clarifying question to support. Building a personal edge-case log saves time on subsequent accounts and creates a record useful for support escalation if needed.

How to Handle Ambiguity

Some rule language is intentionally flexible to allow the firm's risk team discretion. When in doubt, ask support before taking the action, not after. Pre-clearance through support is cheap insurance; post-violation review is much more expensive.

Long-Term Account Health

Treating the account as a long-term asset rather than a short-term lottery ticket changes the optimization function. Long-term traders win by minimizing rule-violation risk, maintaining clean compliance history, and compounding payouts across many cycles.

Five long-term habits that pay off:

  • Pre-session checklist that runs through the rule set every morning.
  • Post-session journal that logs decisions, outcomes and rule-impact for each trade.
  • Monthly review of account performance against the rule profile.
  • Quarterly check of the firm's help center for policy updates.
  • Annual reassessment of whether the firm is still the right fit for the current strategy.

How to Read the Help Center Effectively

The help center is the source of truth for current rules. Reading it effectively requires distinguishing between the headline summary (which is often simplified) and the detailed rule text (which contains the edge cases). Always click through to the underlying article rather than relying on a summary or a FAQ-style snippet.

When the help center is updated, the date of the most recent edit is usually visible. Compare against the date when you last reviewed the rules. Material changes typically warrant a session-level review of how the change affects your strategy.

Comparison: GlassPay Versus Industry Median

To position GlassPay's economics against the broader prop industry, consider the median trader experience. A typical 80/20 split firm pays 80 percent of individual profit cleanly each cycle, no behavioral weighting. The trader knows what each dollar of cycle profit will pay out before the cycle starts. GlassPay introduces variability in exchange for the potential of higher payouts when behavioral multipliers align.

Over a long horizon, a balanced trader running 10 plus cycles on Gold Boost with consistently strong Trading Days and Consistency multipliers can match or beat the equivalent 80/20 firm payout. The break-even depends materially on the realized pool size, which is firm-revenue-dependent and outside the trader's control.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

How much of Rev One Trading's revenue goes to the GlassPay pool?

Rev One Trading allocates 40 percent of total company revenue to the GlassPay Trader Payout Pool. Of that 40 percent, 85 percent is distributed to eligible traders and 15 percent is kept in an operational reserve fund. The pool resets weekly with payouts processed every Friday.

What are the 8 GlassPay multipliers at Rev One Trading?

Rev One Trading's GlassPay uses 8 behavioral multipliers: Consistency, Scalping, News Trading, Trading Days, Peak Drawdown, Account Size, Payout Number and Profit Tier. Each multiplier generates a value (typically 0.65x to 1.5x), and your final Performance Weight is the product of all 8 multiplied together. A single low value can pull the entire PW down.

How does the Trading Days multiplier work at Rev One Trading?

Rev One Trading's Trading Days multiplier drops to 0.65x if you only trade 3 to 4 days during a payout cycle. Trading 5 or more days raises the multiplier toward 1.0x or higher. The Reduced Min Trading Days add-on (20 percent of base price) lowers the minimum to 3 days without the penalty, which is useful for swing traders whose strategies produce fewer trading days.

What is the difference between Silver Boost and Gold Boost?

Rev One Trading's Silver Boost doubles (2x) your final Performance Weight and costs 30 percent of the account base price. Gold Boost quadruples (4x) your final PW and costs 50 percent of base price. Both are purchased at checkout only and apply permanently to that account for every payout cycle the account remains active. The boost economics favor traders running multiple cycles.

Can I add GlassPay boosts after buying a Rev One Trading account?

No. Rev One Trading's GlassPay boosts (Silver, Gold and Individual Multiplier Boosts) can only be purchased at checkout when you buy the account. They cannot be added, removed or modified after purchase. If you want boosts, you must select them before completing your order. Plan the boost profile against your strategy beforehand.

How often does Rev One Trading pay through GlassPay?

Rev One Trading processes GlassPay payouts weekly on Fridays. There are no 30-day waiting cycles or minimum payout thresholds advertised. Payments are made in USDT, USDC, BTC or ETH on published settlement chains. Rev One Trading also advertises no payout caps, meaning there is no published maximum amount you can receive in a single payout.

Does GlassPay penalize scalpers at Rev One Trading?

Rev One Trading's GlassPay includes a Scalping multiplier that evaluates trade duration and frequency patterns. Traders with very short hold times may see a reduced multiplier. Scalpers can offset this by purchasing the Individual Multiplier Boost for Scalping (7.5 percent of base price) at checkout, which adds a 1.25x bonus to that specific multiplier.

Is the GlassPay pool size publicly audited?

The GlassPay pool size at Rev One Trading is not independently audited by any third party as of this writing. Rev One Trading publishes the formula (40 percent of revenue, 85/15 split), but the actual revenue figures and pool amounts rely on the firm's self-reporting. No external verification mechanism is in place yet, so traders should treat the formula as published policy.

How does GlassPay compare to an 80/20 profit split?

Rev One Trading's GlassPay pays from a shared revenue pool weighted by 8 behavioral multipliers, while an 80/20 split pays 80 percent of your individual profit regardless of behavior. GlassPay is less predictable because your payout depends on pool size and other traders' Performance Weights. However, GlassPay claims better incentive alignment since payouts come from revenue rather than trader losses.

Can two Rev One Trading traders with the same profit get different GlassPay payouts?

Yes. Two Rev One Trading traders who both profit 2,000 dollars in the same week can receive different GlassPay payouts. The difference comes from their 8 behavioral multipliers. A trader who scored high on consistency, traded 5 plus days and managed drawdown tightly would have a higher Performance Weight than a trader who made the same profit in one big day with deep drawdown.

What is the highest-leverage way to improve my Performance Weight?

Increase active trading days per cycle from 3 to 4 up to 5 or more. The Trading Days multiplier moves from 0.65x toward 1.0x or higher, which can roughly double the final Performance Weight depending on the other multipliers. No add-on purchase replicates the impact of moving day count from below 5 to 5 plus.

Does Gold Boost guarantee a larger payout than Silver Boost?

Gold Boost multiplies final Performance Weight by 4x compared to Silver Boost at 2x. In a single payout cycle, Gold Boost will produce a larger payout than Silver Boost on identical underlying performance. The break-even cost difference depends on profit volume per cycle, but for accounts running 4 plus payout cycles Gold Boost typically pays for itself relative to Silver Boost.

How does drawdown affect the Performance Weight?

The Peak Drawdown multiplier penalizes deeper drawdowns reached during the cycle. A trader whose equity dipped 20 percent mid-cycle and recovered before payout still sees a reduced multiplier from the peak dip. The Peak Drawdown rule is one reason aggressive position sizing produces lower PW even when the final P&L is similar to a more conservatively sized trader.

Can I purchase multiple boosts on the same account?

Yes, boosts stack at checkout. A trader can purchase Silver Boost plus Individual Multiplier Boost for Scalping on the same account. The costs are additive (30 percent plus 7.5 percent equals 37.5 percent of base for that example). The effects are also combined: Silver doubles the final PW, and the Scalping boost adds 1.25x to the Scalping multiplier before the final 2x is applied.

Is the Profit Tier multiplier capped?

The published structure shows Profit Tier as a multiplier that rises with percentage gains relative to account size. Specific caps are not advertised in the firm's published material, so traders running high-percentage cycles should confirm the exact tier ceiling with Rev One support before relying on continued multiplier growth at the top of the curve.

Does account size affect Performance Weight directly?

Yes. The Account Size multiplier gives larger funded accounts more weight in the pool, all else equal. The structural reason is that larger accounts represent more firm capital at risk per trade, which the model weighs accordingly. Traders comparing pricing tiers should factor the multiplier effect into the total expected-return calculation.

How long does it take to verify Performance Weight in the dashboard?

Performance Weight is calculated automatically on the trade-data feed and shows in the account dashboard once a payout cycle closes. Traders typically see the breakdown within hours of cycle close. Disputes or anomalies in multiplier calculation should be raised with Rev One support immediately, with screenshots of the breakdown and the relevant trade history.

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