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Been thinking about this question a lot lately – can you actually make $1000 a day trading shares? Short answer: yeah, theoretically possible, but the reality is way different from what most people imagine.
Let me break down the actual math because this is where most retail traders get it wrong. If you're starting with $100k and want to hit $1000 daily, you're looking at needing roughly 1% net return every single trading day. Sounds simple until you realize what that means across months and years. Most people don't hit that consistently.
Here's the thing nobody talks about – costs absolutely destroy your returns. Commissions, spreads, slippage, margin interest if you're using leverage, plus taxes on short-term gains. A strategy that looks like it's doing 0.8% daily? Subtract 0.4% in realistic costs and you're down to 0.4% net. On $100k that's $400/day, not $1000. That's why backtesting without factoring in real costs is basically useless.
So what actually works? You need one of these realistic paths. First option: bigger capital plus a solid edge. $200k at 0.5% net per day gets you there. Second: controlled leverage – maybe $50k with 4:1 leverage to manage $200k exposure, but you're taking on margin interest and liquidation risk that can wipe you out fast. Third: a genuinely rare, consistent edge that survives costs – and honestly, those don't come around often.
The leverage thing deserves its own note. Yeah, it cuts your initial capital needs in half, but one bad swing can erase weeks of gains in a morning. I've seen it happen. Position sizing is what actually separates people who last from people who blow up. Most pros risk 0.25–2% per trade and keep strict daily loss limits.
Let's talk about shares trading psychology for a second because this kills more traders than bad strategies. When you're chasing $1000 daily, the pressure is real. Revenge trading after losses, abandoning your rules mid-drawdown, overtrading – these are the actual failure modes. The traders I know who actually hit consistent daily targets treat it like a project, not a headline. They test, measure, adjust.
Here's how the realistic ones do it: backtest with real costs included, paper trade for weeks to see what live execution actually looks like versus simulations, then start live with tiny risk per trade. Only scale when live results match your backtests. Most strategies fail in this paper-to-live transition because slippage and volatility look different in real time.
Regulation matters too. In the US, FINRA's Pattern Day Trader rule means you need $25k minimum for frequent margin trading. That shapes what small accounts can actually do.
So can you make $1000 daily from shares trading? Possible, sure. Common? Rare. The traders actually doing it consistently either have substantial capital ($200k+), a proven repeatable edge that survives real costs, or they're using leverage carefully with strict risk controls. Most retail traders underestimate how much capital you really need or how difficult maintaining that daily target actually is.
The honest version: treat $1000 daily as a disciplined project with evidence-first approach, not a fantasy. Design it, test it properly including all costs, paper trade it, then scale gradually. Track your metrics weekly – win rate, average win versus average loss, expectancy, max drawdown. If live performance diverges from backtests, stop and diagnose instead of pushing harder.
The market pays for actual edge, not desire. If you're serious about this, start by writing down your target return, your capital, expected costs, and a risk-per-trade rule. Then simulate a month on paper with those limits. That's the first real test.