Prop Firm Drawdown

Prop Firm Drawdown — The Complete Guide

Everything you need to know about end of day vs intraday drawdown, balance vs equity, trailing vs static — and why the rule most traders think they know is wrong.

In This Guide
  1. Why this lesson exists
  2. The wine pour (with an interactive)
  3. Six words you need to know
  4. The myth most traders believe
  5. Maya's profit & pullback day (EOD vs intraday)
  6. Sophie's unrealized trap (live scrub)
  7. Renée's trailing lock (evaluation phase)
  8. Choosing your prop firm
  9. What to do this week
Part One

Has this ever happened to you?

Picture this You're long NQ on a $50,000 funded account. Price rips. You're up $2,500 in twenty minutes — equity peaked at $52,500. You smile. You let it work — you're holding for more.

Price stalls. Pulls back a little. Pulls back more. Your unrealized profit shrinks fast. You watch it tick down to +$1,000... then +$500... You reach for the mouse to close the trade and lock in whatever's left.

Before you can click, your platform tells you the trade is already closed. Not by you.

You check your dashboard. Account violated. Shut down. Your balance? Still $50,000. You never realized a single losing trade. The firm closed your account anyway.

If this has happened to you — or someone in our community — you've met the most misunderstood rule in prop trading.

It's called drawdown. And the difference between two versions of it has ended more funded accounts than bad setups ever have. Most traders think they understand it. Most don't. By the end of this lesson, you actually will.

Part Two · The Mental Model

Start with something you already know

Before we touch any technical terms, here's a picture to hold in your head. Once you have it, the rest becomes easy.

Hold this in your mind

Imagine a glass of wine at a tasting.

The sommelier pours you $50,000 worth of wine. There's a delicate line etched into the crystal at the $48,000 mark — the minimum pour line. As you take losing trades, the wine slowly disappears. If the wine drops below that etched line, the sommelier takes the glass back. Tasting over.

Drawdown is the etched line. Your account is the wine. The sommelier is always watching — the second the wine drops below the line, the glass goes. The only mystery this lesson solves: when does the etched line itself move up?

Interactive · Try It
Move the wine level up and down
Drag the slider to change your account balance. Watch what happens at the line.
$50,000
Above the line ✓ Your account is at $50,000. You're $2,000 above the etched line. The glass is yours.

Now you've felt it. The line matters. The wine level matters. The only mystery left is when the etched line decides to move higher.

Part Three · The Vocabulary

Six words you need to actually understand

If someone explained drawdown to you before and it didn't click, it's probably because they skipped these. Don't skip them. Every single one shows up in the stories coming next.

Your Drawdown Glossary
Balance
The money sitting in your account from closed trades only. If your trade is still open, the profit or loss hasn't been added to your balance yet.
Equity
Your balance plus what your open trades are showing right now, in real time. If you're long NQ and it drops 30 points, your balance is unchanged but your equity is down $600.
Realized P&L
Profit or loss from trades you've already closed. Locked in. Counted on your balance.
Unrealized P&L
Profit or loss from trades that are still open. Floating. Not locked in yet. Can change with every tick. Also called "open P&L" or "floating P&L."
The Line
The account value you're not allowed to drop below. Technically called your Maximum Loss Limit (MLL), Max Drawdown, or Auto-Liquidation Level — depends on the firm. Same thing.
Trailing
When the line moves up as you make profit — and locks there, never coming back down. Different from "static," where the line stays in one place forever.

Okay. Now you have the language. Here's the truth that most guides on the internet get wrong.

Part Four · The Myth

The difference you think is there isn't the real one

Here's what almost every blog post and YouTube video will tell you:

"EOD drawdown only checks your account at the end of the day. Intraday checks every tick. So with EOD, you can dip way below the line intraday as long as you close above it."

This is wrong. Or at least, it's wrong for nearly every major futures prop firm operating today. Here's what the firms themselves actually say in their help docs:

The truth, straight from the firms

"EOD" describes when the line moves — not when it's enforced.

Across the major futures prop firms, the language is consistent: the loss limit is monitored in real time, and both your realized AND unrealized P&L count toward it. If your equity hits the limit at any point during the trading day, your account is liquidated immediately — even on so-called "End of Day" accounts.

The "End of Day" part of EOD drawdown only refers to when the line itself updates upward as you make money. The enforcement is always live, and almost always uses equity (balance + open trade P&L), not just balance.

Verify this for your own firm. Every prop firm's help center spells out exactly how their drawdown works. Read the source — never trust marketing copy or YouTube summaries.

Translation: every modern futures prop firm enforces your drawdown line in real time, using your equity (balance + open trade P&L). The difference between EOD and intraday is only about when the line itself updates upward as you make money.

End of Day (EOD) Drawdown

Enforced live — touch the line, account closed. The difference: the line only ratchets up at market close, based on your closing balance. Your unrealized profit during the day does not pull the line up while you're trading.

Intraday (Real-Time) Drawdown

Enforced live — touch the line, account closed. The difference: the line ratchets up in real time, the instant your equity hits a new high (including unrealized profit). Once it moves up, it never moves back down.

The principle, simplified

Both rules close your account the second your equity touches the line. Realized loss, unrealized loss — doesn't matter. The only difference between EOD and intraday is when the line itself decides to climb higher behind you.

This distinction is subtle but enormous. The next two stories — Maya and Sophie — show exactly how it plays out. Maya rides a winner through a pullback. Sophie holds for too much. Both end up at the same place under the wrong rule: liquidated.

Part Five · Story One

Meet Maya · The Profit & Pullback Day

Maya's day is the perfect demonstration of the principle: same trade, same numbers, two completely different outcomes — depending only on when the line moves up.

M
Maya · Funded NQ Trader
$50,000 account · $2,000 trailing drawdown · Line starts at $48,000
9:30 AM
Market opens flat. Balance: $50,000 · Equity: $50,000
10:00 AM
Long NQ at 19800. Price rips to 19900 — she's up $2,000 unrealized. Equity peaks: $52,000
10:30 AM
Price reverses. The trade pulls back hard. Equity: $49,000
11:00 AM
More pullback. Equity continues falling. Equity: $48,500
11:15 AM
Maya closes the trade — taking the loss to protect the account. Balance: $48,500 · -$1,500 realized
4:00 PM
Market closes. Net result: -$1,500 loss for the day, never went below the original $48K line.Balance: $48,500

Did Maya keep her account?

The answer depends entirely on which rule her firm uses — and this is where the principle actually matters.

Interactive · Tap to switch
Maya's day, two rules compared
Same exact equity curve. Different rule. Different fate.

This is the principle in action: Maya's equity peaked at $52,000 and bottomed at $48,500 on both runs. Same trade. The only thing that differed was where the line was at the moment she pulled back.

The takeaway

On EOD: The line stayed at $48,000 the entire trading session — the line only ratchets up at the end of the day, not during. Her equity bottomed at $48,500, never touched the line. ✓ Account safe.

On Intraday: The moment her equity hit $52,000, the line ratcheted up to $50,000 in real time. When equity dropped back to $49,000 at 11:00 AM, that was below the new line. ✗ Account closed instantly — she never even got to close the trade.

Same trade. Same equity curve. The difference was when the line decided to chase her up.

Part Six · Story Two · The Cruelest Version

Now meet Sophie · The Unrealized Trap

Sophie's story is the one that ends accounts in our community. She was up money. She never closed a losing trade. She still lost her account. Here's how.

S
Sophie · Funded NQ Trader
$50,000 account · Intraday trailing $2,000 · Line starts at $48,000
9:30 AM
Opens long NQ at 19800. Balance: $50,000 · Equity: $50,000 · Line: $48,000
10:00 AM
Price rips to 19925. Up $2,500 unrealized. She doesn't take profit — she's holding for more. Equity peaks: $52,500
10:00 AM
The line ratchets up in real time as her equity climbs. At her peak it locks at $50,000 (her firm caps the trailing line at starting balance). New line: $50,000
10:25 AM
Price reverses. Her open trade pulls back — equity drops to $50,200. Still above the line. Barely. Equity: $50,200
10:31 AM
Price drops further. Her equity hits $50,000 — touching the line. Account violated. Equity: $50,000
10:32 AM
Too late. Her positions are auto-liquidated. Her actual balance at violation: still $50,000. She never realized a single losing trade.

Wait — she never lost real money?

Correct. If Sophie had just closed her trade flat at any point, her balance would still be $50,000 — exactly where she started. She didn't realize a dime of loss.

But under intraday trailing rules, your highest unrealized profit pulls the line up. Then your equity gets measured against that new, higher line in real time. The firm doesn't care that it was never realized. It cares what your equity touched.

Interactive · Live Playback
Sophie's day, scrub through it
Drag the timeline or press play. Watch the firm's risk monitor update in real time.
9:30
Firm's Risk Monitor · Live
MONITORING
Balance
$50,000
Closed trades
Open P&L
$0
Unrealized
Live Equity
$50,000
What's measured
Line
$48,000
$2,000 room
Trade in progress Press play or drag the slider. Watch her balance stay at $50K the whole time — but the line marches up as her unrealized profit rises, then traps her when the trade reverses.
The Unrealized P&L Trap

Your open trade's highest moment sets the line. Your open trade's lowest moment gets measured against it.

This is how traders lose funded accounts without ever losing real money. You're long, price pops, you hold. The line ratchets up behind you with every tick of profit. Then price gives half of it back — and the new line is sitting exactly where your equity used to be safe.

Rule of thumb on any intraday trailing account: take profit faster, scale out, lock in gains. Do not let unrealized profit sit — it's writing a violation line in real time behind you.

This is also why some of the major prop firms have deliberately moved away from intraday trailing in their newer account types. The reason they cite: intraday trailing punishes normal market pullbacks and causes traders to lose accounts prematurely. If your firm uses it, you need a tighter exit strategy than anywhere else.

Part Seven · Story Three

Meet Renée · The Trailing Lock

Renée's story explains something every funded trader needs to understand: the line doesn't trail forever. At some point it locks. And that moment is the best thing that'll happen to your account.

R
Renée · Funded NQ Trader
$50,000 account · EOD trailing $2,000 · Locks at $52,100
Day 1
Starts fresh. Line at $48,000. Closes day at $50,800. Line trails to $48,800
Day 2
Closes at $51,600. Line moves up again. Line: $49,600
Day 3
Closes at $52,100 — exactly $100 above the trail amount. LINE LOCKS at $50,100
Day 4+
The line never moves again. Every dollar she makes is now a dollar of permanent buffer. If she makes another $3,000, she has $5,000 of room instead of $2,000.

This is why the first few days after funding feel the tightest. Your buffer stays frozen at whatever the trail amount is. Once you pass the lock threshold, you finally start building permanent cushion.

Every firm has different lock rules. Most fall into one of these patterns:

Common Lock Patterns
Locks at Start
The line stops trailing once it reaches your starting balance. You need to be above your starting balance for the line to lock. Most common pattern.
Locks at Start + $100
The line locks slightly above starting balance. You need to push your account past starting balance + $100 EOD before the line stops moving.
Locks at Trail Threshold
The line locks when your balance reaches $100 above the trail amount (e.g., $52,100 on a $50K account with $2K trail). The line then sits at $50,100 forever.
Locks at Initial Trail Balance
Some firms use a custom "Initial Trail Balance" you must exceed before the line locks at starting balance. Read your firm's specific definition carefully.
No Lock
Some account types (especially evaluation accounts) have no lock at all — the line keeps trailing forever. These accounts are the most punishing.
Important

Check your specific firm and account type in their help docs to find your exact lock threshold. Different firms and even different accounts within the same firm can have different lock rules. Never assume — always verify.

Part Eight · Your Firm

Choosing your prop firm

There are a lot of prop firms in the futures space — and each one has its own version of the drawdown rules we just walked through. Here are some of the most common firms women in our community trade with:

Common Futures Prop Firms
Topstep
One of the longest-running futures prop firms.
MyFundedFutures
Offers multiple account types with different rule structures.
Tradeify
Has both straight funding and challenge-style accounts.
Apex Trader Funding
Popular for evaluation-based funding programs.
LucidPro / LucidFlex
Offers both evaluation and instant funding options.
★ Do Your Own Research

I'm not going to tell you which firm is best.

Every firm structures their drawdown, payouts, contract limits, and account scaling differently. What works for one trader's style is wrong for another. The "best" firm is the one whose rules match how you actually trade.

Before signing up with any firm, do this:

  • Read their full rules document in the help center — not just the marketing page
  • Confirm the drawdown type (EOD vs intraday, static vs trailing) and the lock threshold
  • Check the contract limit, scaling rules, and minimum trading days
  • Understand the payout policy — frequency, percentage, and any payout-related rule changes
  • Look for recent reviews from actual funded traders, not affiliates

A great firm becomes a terrible firm if its rules don't fit your trading. Choose the structure that lets you trade your strategy without constantly fighting the rule book.

The pattern across all of them

Every modern futures prop firm enforces drawdown in real time using equity (not just balance). The marketing difference between "EOD" and "intraday" is really about whether your line can ratchet up during the day based on unrealized profit. EOD firms move the line only at close; intraday firms move it with every equity high. Both will violate you the moment your equity touches the line.

Part Nine · Take Action

What to do this week

Your drawdown audit

1
Open every prop firm dashboard you have. Find the official rules document or help center for each account. Marketing pages lie by omission. The help center is the source of truth.
2
For each account, write down five numbers: rule type (EOD or intraday), trail amount, current line, lock threshold, and whether the line has locked yet. Sticky note. Next to your monitor.
3
Every day before you trade, check your current line. Tradovate shows it as "DRAWDOWN AUTO LIQ LEVEL." NinjaTrader calls it "Trailing Max Drawdown." Knowing this number is non-negotiable.
4
Set stops with slippage buffer. At least $200–300 above the line on an NQ trade. Never at the line. Never past it. Slippage will take out the difference.
5
On intraday trailing accounts, take profit faster. Scale out. Lock in partial wins. Don't let unrealized profit ride unprotected — it's writing a violation line in real time behind you.
6
Trade smaller until you pass the lock. Until your line locks, every dollar of profit only trails the line up. You don't build permanent buffer until after the lock. Don't swing for the fences before you've earned the cushion.

Remember, babe —

Drawdown isn't about how much you can lose. It's about where the line is right now, and whether your equity is about to touch it. Master those two questions and you've passed the test most prop traders fail.

Now go check your dashboard. Right now.

Pretty Profitable