Quick Answer — Rev One Trading GlassPay
- • GlassPay takes 40% of Rev One Trading's total revenue and puts it into a Trader Payout Pool — 85% goes to traders, 15% stays in reserve.
- • Your individual payout share is determined by your Performance Weight (PW), calculated from 8 behavioral multipliers like consistency, trading days, and profit tier.
- • Silver Boost (add-on) doubles your final PW; Gold Boost quadruples it — both purchased at checkout and locked to the account.
- • GlassPay pays weekly on Fridays in USDT, USDC, BTC, or ETH with no payout caps and no 30-day waiting cycles.
- • Key risk: your payout depends on pool size (Rev One's revenue) and how many other traders are in the pool — high-performing weeks with few participants pay more than average weeks with thousands.
Why I'm watching Rev One Trading closely: As a funded trader and prop firm reviewer, I evaluate every new firm against the same criteria—payout reliability, rule transparency, and platform stability. Rev One's GlassPay model is genuinely different from anything else in the industry, and I've been testing their accounts to see if the promise holds up.
For the full picture on Rev One Trading—including their GlassPay payout model, account types, and how they compare to established firms—read my complete Rev One Trading review. For the absolute latest, check Rev One Trading's website or their help center.
GlassPay is Rev One Trading's pool-based payout system that replaces the traditional profit-split model used by most prop firms. Instead of receiving a fixed percentage of your trading profits, your payout is a weighted share of a revenue pool funded by 40% of the company's total income.
I've reviewed over 50 prop firm payout models. Most are simple: you make $1,000, the firm takes 20%, you get $800. GlassPay doesn't work like that at all. Your actual dollar payout depends on the pool size, how many other traders are eligible, and how your 8 behavioral multipliers stack up against everyone else's.
This is genuinely novel. It's also more complex than anything else in the industry, and complexity can hide disadvantages if you don't understand the math.
How Does the GlassPay Revenue Pool Work?
Rev One Trading takes 40% of its total company revenue and deposits it into the Trader Payout Pool every week. Of that pool:
- 85% is distributed to eligible traders
- 15% goes into an operational reserve fund
The pool resets weekly. Your share of the 85% payout portion depends on your Performance Weight (PW) relative to all other eligible traders that week.
A simple example: if Rev One Trading generates $100,000 in revenue during a given week, $40,000 goes to the Trader Payout Pool. Of that $40,000, $34,000 (85%) is available for trader payouts and $6,000 (15%) goes to reserve.
If your PW represents 2% of all combined PW in the pool, your payout that week would be $680.
What Are the 8 GlassPay Behavioral Multipliers?
Your Performance Weight is the product of 8 separate multipliers. Each one evaluates a specific aspect of your trading behavior during the payout cycle. Here's every multiplier:
| Multiplier | What It Measures | Key Detail |
|---|---|---|
| Consistency | How evenly your daily P&L is distributed | Penalizes accounts where one big day dominates total profit |
| Scalping | Trade duration and frequency patterns | Very short hold times may reduce this multiplier |
| News Trading | Trading activity around high-impact news events | Heavy news-event trading can lower this multiplier |
| Trading Days | Number of active trading days per cycle | 3-4 days = 0.65x; more days = higher multiplier |
| Peak Drawdown | Maximum drawdown reached during the cycle | Deeper drawdowns reduce your PW |
| Account Size | The size of your funded account | Larger accounts carry more weight in the pool |
| Payout Number | How many payouts you've received historically | Rewards long-term, repeat traders |
| Profit Tier | Your profit level relative to the account size | Higher percentage gains = higher multiplier |
Each multiplier produces a value (like 0.65x, 1.0x, 1.2x, etc.) and your final PW is the product of all 8 multiplied together. A trader who scores well on all 8 gets a significantly higher share of the pool than someone with low marks in 2-3 categories.
How Is Performance Weight Calculated?
Your Performance Weight (PW) is the mathematical product of all 8 multipliers. Not the sum. The product.
This distinction matters enormously. If you score 1.2x on 7 multipliers but 0.65x on Trading Days (because you only traded 3 days), your PW isn't 1.2 + 1.2 + ... + 0.65. It's 1.2 x 1.2 x 1.2 x 1.2 x 1.2 x 1.2 x 1.2 x 0.65.
That 0.65x on a single multiplier drags down your entire PW by 35%. One weak category can torpedo an otherwise strong payout week.
The practical implication: you can't ignore any multiplier. A scalper who nails consistency, profit tier, and peak drawdown but gets hammered on the Scalping multiplier and News Trading multiplier will see their PW cut significantly compared to a swing trader with balanced scores across all 8.
What Are Silver and Gold Boosts?
Silver Boost and Gold Boost are add-ons you purchase at checkout when buying a Rev One Trading account. They multiply your final PW after all 8 behavioral multipliers are calculated.
Silver Boost: 2x your final PW. Costs 30% of the account base price.
Gold Boost: 4x your final PW. Costs 50% of the account base price.
Example: if the base price of your account is $399, Silver Boost costs $119.70 and Gold Boost costs $199.50.
These boosts are permanent for the life of the account. They're also non-modifiable after purchase. You can't add Silver Boost later if you didn't buy it at checkout.
The math on Gold Boost is striking. If your calculated PW is 1.5, Gold Boost makes it 6.0. That quadrupling applies every single payout cycle for as long as the account is active. Over multiple weeks of payouts, Gold Boost can return multiples of its purchase cost.
The catch: if your account gets breached or terminated early, you lose the boost investment along with the account.
What Are Individual Multiplier Boosts?
Beyond Silver and Gold, Rev One Trading offers Individual Multiplier Boosts for each of the 8 behavioral multipliers. Each boost costs 7.5% of the account base price and gives you a 1.25x bonus on that specific multiplier.
If you know the Scalping multiplier is going to hurt you because of your trading style, you can buy the Scalping Multiplier Boost to partially offset it. The 1.25x boost on one multiplier won't fully compensate for a poor score, but it softens the penalty.
You can stack multiple individual boosts. Buying all 8 would cost 60% of base price (8 x 7.5%) and give you 1.25x on every multiplier. Combined with Gold Boost (50% of base), you'd be paying 110% of the base price in add-ons alone. That's a significant upfront investment, but the compounding effect across multiple payout cycles could be substantial for consistent traders.
GlassPay vs. Traditional Profit Splits: What's the Real Difference?
Traditional prop firm payout model: you profit $2,000, the firm takes their cut (usually 10-20%), you receive $1,600-$1,800. Simple, predictable, directly tied to your individual P&L.
GlassPay: your payout is a share of a communal pool, weighted by behavioral factors. Two traders with identical $2,000 profits could receive different payouts because their multiplier profiles differ.
| Factor | Traditional Split (e.g., 80/20) | GlassPay (Rev One Trading) |
|---|---|---|
| Payout basis | Your individual profit | Share of company revenue pool |
| Predictability | High — known percentage of your P&L | Lower — depends on pool size and competition |
| Behavior incentive | Only profit matters | 8 multipliers reward specific behaviors |
| Firm incentive alignment | Firm profits when you lose | Firm claims payouts come from revenue, not losses |
| Transparency | Simple percentage, no formula | Published formula, but pool size unaudited |
The advantage of GlassPay: if the model works as described, Rev One Trading has no incentive to deny payouts because they've already allocated the money. Traditional firms have a direct financial interest in trader losses.
The disadvantage: you can't predict your exact payout amount. A great trading week might pay less than expected if the pool is small (low revenue period) or crowded (many eligible traders). A mediocre week could pay well if fewer traders qualify.
How to Maximize Your GlassPay Payout Share
Based on the multiplier structure, here's how to optimize your PW:
Trade at least 5 days per cycle. The Trading Days multiplier drops to 0.65x at 3-4 days. That single factor cuts your entire PW by 35%. Unless you've purchased the Reduced Min Trading Days add-on (which lowers the threshold to 3 days), plan to trade 5+ days.
Distribute your profits evenly. The Consistency multiplier penalizes accounts where one day accounts for most of the profit. If you make $500 across 5 days, try to avoid making $450 on day 1 and $50 spread across the other 4.
Manage drawdown aggressively. The Peak Drawdown multiplier rewards tight risk management. Keep your max drawdown shallow during the payout cycle. This naturally conflicts with swinging for large gains, so there's a balance to find.
Avoid pure scalping patterns. Very short hold times trigger the Scalping multiplier. If you're a scalper, consider the Individual Multiplier Boost for Scalping at checkout.
Think long-term. The Payout Number multiplier rewards repeat payouts. Your first few cycles will have a lower PW on this factor than someone on their 20th payout. Stick with the account, and this multiplier compounds over time.
Is GlassPay Actually Better Than a Flat Profit Split?
Depends on your perspective.
If you value simplicity and predictability, a flat 80/20 split is easier to understand and project. You know exactly what $1,000 in profit will pay you.
If you value transparency and incentive alignment, GlassPay's published formula and pool-based structure are more sophisticated. You can model your expected payout based on your trading style and adjust accordingly.
The wild card is verification. A flat 80/20 split is easy to verify: did you get 80% of your profit? Yes or no. GlassPay requires trusting that the pool size is accurate, the revenue allocation is real, and the multiplier calculations are honest. None of this is independently audited as of April 2026.
I'm genuinely interested in how this plays out over time. If GlassPay proves reliable, it's a structural improvement over the traditional model. If it doesn't, the complexity just provides more places to hide unfavorable mechanics.
The bottom line: GlassPay is the most transparent payout formula in the prop firm industry on paper. Rev One Trading publishes every multiplier, the pool allocation (40% of revenue, 85/15 split), and the weighting methodology. Whether the execution matches the formula remains unproven. Traders who understand the 8 multipliers and optimize their behavior accordingly will capture a disproportionate share of the pool. Those who ignore the multipliers and trade like it's a flat split will be disappointed by their payouts. Start by modeling your trading style against the multipliers, buy the boosts that offset your weak spots, and verify your actual payout against the published math once you've completed a cycle.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much of Rev One Trading's revenue goes to the GlassPay pool?
Rev One Trading allocates 40% of total company revenue to the GlassPay Trader Payout Pool. Of that 40%, 85% is distributed to eligible traders and 15% 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 (e.g., 0.65x to 1.5x), and your final Performance Weight is the product of all 8 multiplied together.
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 3-4 days during a payout cycle. Trading 5 or more days raises the multiplier. The Reduced Min Trading Days add-on (20% of base price) lowers the minimum to 3 days without the penalty, which is useful for swing traders.
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% of the account base price. Gold Boost quadruples (4x) your final PW and costs 50% of base price. Both are purchased at checkout only and apply permanently to that account for every payout cycle.
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.
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 mentioned. Payments are made in USDT, USDC, BTC, or ETH. Rev One Trading also claims no payout caps, meaning there's no 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 at Rev One Trading can offset this by purchasing the Individual Multiplier Boost for Scalping (7.5% of base price) at checkout, which adds a 1.25x bonus to that specific multiplier.
Is the GlassPay pool size publicly audited?
As of April 2026, the GlassPay pool size at Rev One Trading is not independently audited by any third party. Rev One Trading publishes the formula (40% of revenue, 85/15 split), but the actual revenue figures and pool amounts rely on the firm's self-reporting. No external verification mechanism exists yet.
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% 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, not from 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 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+ 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.