Micro vs Mini Futures for Prop Traders (2026)

Micro vs Mini Futures for Prop Traders (2026)

A micro futures contract is exactly one-tenth the size of the equivalent mini contract. The E-mini S&P 500 (ES) is $50 per index point; the Micro E-mini S&P 500 (MES) is $5 per point. Same market, one-tenth the profit and one-tenth the loss per point. Micros let you size positions precisely, which is why they suit smaller accounts and tighter risk control inside a prop firm evaluation.

Part of our futures prop firm guide series: What is a Futures Prop Firm? · What is the Profit Target? · Maximum Loss Limit Explained

Last verified: June 2026 against alpha-futures.com/how-it-works and CME contract specifications

General information only. Simulated trading. Futures involve substantial risk; outcomes not guaranteed.

What is the difference between micro and mini futures?

Size. They track the same underlying index, but a micro contract is one-tenth the contract value of the mini. That means one-tenth of the dollar move per point, in both directions.

Contract

Symbol

Dollar per point

Minimum tick

Tick value

Relative size

E-mini S&P 500

ES

$50

0.25

$12.50

1 mini

Micro E-mini S&P 500

MES

$5

0.25

$1.25

1/10 of ES

E-mini Nasdaq-100

NQ

$20

0.25

$5.00

1 mini

Micro E-mini Nasdaq-100

MNQ

$2

0.25

$0.50

1/10 of NQ

E-mini Dow

YM

$5

1.0

$5.00

1 mini

Micro E-mini Dow

MYM

$0.50

1.0

$0.50

1/10 of YM

E-mini Russell 2000

RTY

$50

0.10

$5.00

1 mini

Micro E-mini Russell 2000

M2K

$5

0.10

$0.50

1/10 of RTY

So a 10-point move on ES is $500, while the same 10-point move on MES is $50. Same chart, smaller stakes.

Contract value: a worked example

"Dollar per point" is what hits your account, but the contract also controls a much larger notional value. With the S&P 500 trading near 5,000:

  • ES (mini): 5,000 x $50 = $250,000 notional per contract
  • MES (micro): 5,000 x $5 = $25,000 notional per contract

You are not paying that amount; futures trade on margin. But it shows why one mini moves your balance fast, and why micros give you a gentler way to take the same trade.

Why micros matter for prop traders

Micros give you precision, and precision is how you survive a Maximum Loss Limit. Three practical reasons traders use them:

  • Finer risk control. You can size at 3 micros instead of being forced up to a full mini, keeping dollar risk inside the plan.
  • Smaller accounts stay viable. On a smaller evaluation, one mini can be too much heat for the drawdown. Micros let you trade the same setup at a fraction of the risk.
  • Scaling in and out. You can add or trim exposure in small steps rather than all-or-nothing.

If you are weighing whether you even need a large account to start, see do you need $25K to day trade futures.

Micros exist beyond the stock indices

The micro range is not limited to equity indices. CME also lists micros across the other markets a futures trader uses, including:

  • Micro Gold (MGC) and other micro metals
  • Micro WTI Crude Oil (MCL) in energy
  • Micro E-mini FX and Micro Bitcoin (MBT) / Micro Ether (MET)

The same logic applies: a micro is a fraction of the standard or mini contract, so you can trade these markets with smaller, more controllable size.

Verified Alpha Futures contract limits per plan

Alpha Futures sets a maximum position size, shown in contracts, that depends on your plan and account size. These are the current published limits:

Account size

Plan

Max contracts

25K

Zero

1

50K

Zero

3

100K

Zero

6

50K

Premium

4

100K

Premium

8

150K

Premium

12

50K

Advanced

5

100K

Advanced

10

150K

Advanced

15

alpha-futures.com/how-it-works in standard futures terms, 10 micros equal 1 mini, so a smaller contract cap still leaves room to trade meaningful micro size. Confirm exactly how micros count toward your plan's limit, and any scaling on Qualified Accounts, at help.alpha-futures.com before you trade.

Should you trade micros or minis?

It comes down to your account size and risk per trade, not preference. A rough guide:

  • Trade micros if you are on a smaller account, you are still proving consistency, or your strategy needs fine position sizing to respect the drawdown.
  • Trade minis if your account size and profit target make micro sizing impractical, and you can take full-contract risk without threatening your Maximum Loss Limit.

Many qualified traders use both: minis for core positions, micros to fine-tune. The goal is to hit the profit target without a single trade putting the account at risk.

FAQs

What is the difference between micro and mini futures?

A micro contract is one-tenth the size of the equivalent mini. For example, ES is $50 per point and MES is $5 per point on the same S&P 500 index.

How many micros equal one mini?

Ten. In standard futures terms, 10 micros carry the same exposure as 1 mini.

What is the tick value of micro futures?

It is one-tenth of the mini. MES is $1.25 per 0.25 tick versus $12.50 on ES, and MNQ is $0.50 per 0.25 tick versus $5.00 on NQ.

What is the maximum position size at Alpha Futures?

It depends on plan and size: Zero allows 1 to 6 contracts (25K to 100K), Premium allows 4 to 12 (50K to 150K), and Advanced allows 5 to 15 (50K to 150K). Confirm current limits on the help centre.

Are micros better for beginners?

Often, yes. Micros let you trade real setups with much smaller dollar risk, which makes it easier to respect the Maximum Loss Limit while building consistency.

Do micros and minis track the same markets?

Yes. MES and ES both track the S&P 500, MNQ and NQ both track the Nasdaq-100, and so on. Only the contract size differs.

Simulated evaluations and Qualified Accounts use simulated funds. Futures involve substantial risk; outcomes not guaranteed.