The short answer
Instant Pro is the bestselling member of the UZO instant family. It keeps the same core risk rules as the standard Instant account (no profit target, 4% daily drawdown, 7% trailing maximum drawdown), but adds a tighter single-trade maximum loss and comes in at the lowest entry cost of the instant class.
Both Instant and Instant Pro fund you immediately, with no evaluation phase to clear first. The difference between them is one rule and one price. This article spells out exactly what is shared, what changes, and which trader each one suits.
What is identical to Instant
Instant Pro inherits the full instant-account framework. If you already understand the standard Instant account, you already understand most of Pro.
No profit target. There is nothing to hit before you can request a reward. You trade, you build profit, you withdraw.
4% daily drawdown. Your equity cannot fall 4% below the day's starting balance. The limit resets at 00:00 UTC.
7% trailing maximum drawdown. The floor trails your equity upward as you grow, then behaves under the Dynamic Risk Shield once your profit threshold is reached.
Account sizes up to $1M, weekend trading allowed, and no time limit.
90% trader / 10% firm split at every account size, with 1:100 leverage.
Allowed strategies are the same too: expert advisors and bots, custom indicators, copy trading from your own account, news trading, and holding overnight or over the weekend. The usual bans apply on both products: no latency or HFT arbitrage, no tick-exploit scalping, and nothing that games the simulation.
What is different
Two things separate Instant Pro from Instant, and both are in the trader's favour if you trade with discipline.
Rule | Instant | Instant Pro |
Single-trade maximum loss | 2% of balance | Tighter than 2% (shown on your dashboard) |
Entry cost | Standard | Lowest of the instant class |
Daily drawdown | 4% | 4% (same) |
Trailing max drawdown | 7% | 7% (same) |
Tighter single-trade maximum loss. Instant caps any single trade at a 2% loss of your balance. Instant Pro sets that cap lower. The exact percentage is shown on your dashboard for the size you hold. In practice this means Pro asks you to size each position more conservatively, which is the same habit that keeps traders inside the daily and trailing limits over the long run.
Lowest entry cost of the instant class. Instant Pro is priced below the other instant accounts at comparable sizes. Per-size prices are best read live, since they vary by account size. See live pricing on the dashboard for the current figure.
Why it is the bestseller
Instant Pro is the most popular instant account because it pairs the lowest cost of entry with a risk rule that quietly protects the trader. The tighter single-trade cap stops one oversized position from doing damage, and that discipline is exactly what separates traders who keep their account from those who do not. You get immediate funding, no profit target, and the same generous drawdown headroom as standard Instant, for less.
You keep 90%
On Instant Pro, as on every UZO account, you keep 90% of the rewards you earn and the firm keeps 10%. That split is fixed at every account size, all the way to $1M.
Who Instant Pro is for
Choose Instant Pro if you want immediate funding at the lowest possible entry cost and you trade with controlled position sizing. The tighter single-trade cap is a natural fit for traders who scale in or take measured risk per position rather than betting large on one idea.
Choose standard Instant if you specifically want the wider 2% single-trade allowance and are comfortable paying the standard entry cost for it. Everything else (drawdown rules, no target, sizes, split, leverage) is the same on both. We will say it plainly: trading simulated capital is still trading, and most accounts that breach do so on a single oversized loss. The Pro cap exists to make that harder.
Related
Instant: how the standard instant account works
Instant, Instant Pro, and Instant 24h
The single-trade loss limit on instant accounts
The trailing maximum drawdown on instant accounts explained
