You just got stopped out. The loss is sitting in your head. You watch the chart and see the next move setting up. You know you should probably be done for the day — but you convince yourself this setup is different. Twenty minutes later you have another loss. Or worse: a loss three times the size of the first.

This is revenge trading — and it is responsible for more blown prop firm accounts than any bad strategy ever will be.

What is revenge trading?

Revenge trading is taking one or more trades driven by the emotional state that follows a loss, with the aim of recovering that loss. The name is fitting: you want to "get back" at the market. But the market does not know you had a loss — and does not care.

Revenge trading in one sentence

Revenge trading is trading from emotion instead of analysis — with the result that you do not have one bad day, you have a disaster.

Why it is so hard to stop

A loss activates the same neural response in the brain as physical pain. The amygdala — the emotional centre — switches to a fight-or-flight state. Rational thinking is temporarily overridden. You are literally unable to produce the same quality of analysis as before the loss.

On top of that, loss aversion plays a role — a concept from behavioural economics. People feel losses approximately twice as intensely as an equivalent gain feels good. A €200 loss feels twice as painful as a €200 gain feels pleasant. That pain creates the urge to undo it — and that is the most dangerous motivation to trade from.

Recognise the signals

Revenge trading is not always obvious in the moment. In hindsight it is usually painfully clear. These are the early warning signs:

Revenge trading at prop firms

On a personal account, revenge trading is costly. On a prop firm challenge it is fatal. A challenge has a daily drawdown limit — at most firms 4–5%. One good session followed by one revenge trading session can end your challenge in a single morning.

Prop firm traders operate under extra pressure: the feeling that you have to perform, that every losing day brings you closer to the end of the challenge. That pressure amplifies the temptation to revenge trade. The opposite mindset — my job today is to protect my account — is what actually passes challenges.

The 4-step protocol

1.
Stop immediately. Close the chart as soon as you have logged your loss. No "just watching." The market will be there tomorrow.
2.
Wait at least 20 minutes. During that time, the stress hormone cortisol drops enough to allow rational thinking. Go for a walk, drink water, do something else.
3.
Ask the test question. "Would I take this next trade if I had not had a loss today?" If the answer is no or uncertain: stop for the day.
4.
Log the loss in your journal. Write down: what was the setup, was it a valid trade, what went wrong? The act of writing removes the emotional charge and turns the loss into data.

Read also: Why Traders Break Their Rules · FOMO Trading: How to Stop · The Complete Trading Discipline Guide

FAQ

Is revenge trading the same as overtrading?
Not always. Overtrading means taking too many trades — which can also stem from boredom or FOMO. Revenge trading is specifically taking trades driven by the emotion of a loss, with the goal of recovering that loss. Overtrading is the behaviour; revenge trading is the emotional trigger.
Can I still trade on the same day after a stop loss?
Yes — if you have a clear procedure. Wait 15–30 minutes. Then ask: does the next setup meet all my criteria? Am I taking this trade because the setup is valid, or because I want to recover a loss? If the answer is the latter: stop for the day.
Why does trying harder after a loss not work?
Because after a loss your brain is in a heightened state of arousal — you want to decide faster, your risk assessment is skewed, and your focus is on recovering the loss rather than setup quality. Trying harder in that state makes things worse, not better.
How do I know if I am revenge trading?
Ask yourself after every loss: would I have taken this next trade if I had not had a loss today? If the answer is no, or if you hesitate — it is revenge trading.
Logify detects revenge trading patterns
After 30 trades you see in Logify exactly when you break your rules. Which hour, which day, how many trades after a loss. Data makes it visible — awareness stops it.
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