Max Drawdown
The total dollar amount your account can lose from its highest point (or starting balance) before the account is automatically closed.
What is Max Drawdown?
Max drawdown is the hard cap on how far your account can fall before the firm automatically closes it. It’s the single most important rule on any prop firm account — every other rule is either a payout filter (consistency, minimum days) or a position-size constraint. Max drawdown is the rule that ENDS accounts.
The headline max drawdown number (e.g., “$2,500 on a $50K account”) tells you how much room you have. But how that number is calculated determines whether the room is real or theoretical:
- Live trailing: Floor follows mark-to-market peak in real time. $2,500 below your highest unrealized point.
- EOD trailing: Floor follows closing balance peak. $2,500 below your highest closing balance.
- Static: Floor fixed at starting balance – $2,500. Never moves.
Same headline $2,500. Wildly different in practice. A trader running tight strategies that frequently spike up and give back will fail intraday-trailing accounts at 3x the rate they’d fail static accounts with the same headline number.
How Max Drawdown works
The breach mechanic: When your account’s mark-to-market value falls below the drawdown floor — even briefly under live trailing — the firm’s risk system closes all positions, cancels orders, and marks the account as failed. You receive an email, the dashboard shows “account closed” status, and there’s no recovery.
How firms typically calculate the floor:
- Live trailing: floor = max(account_high_water_mark) – drawdown_amount, calculated continuously
- EOD trailing: floor = max(closing_balance_history) – drawdown_amount, calculated at session close
- Static: floor = starting_balance – drawdown_amount, fixed at evaluation start
Account size scaling: Most firms use 5% drawdown across account sizes:
- $25K account: $1,500 max drawdown (6%)
- $50K account: $2,500 max drawdown (5%)
- $75K account: $2,750 max drawdown (3.7%)
- $100K account: $3,000 max drawdown (3%)
- $150K account: $4,500 max drawdown (3%)
- $250K account: $5,500 max drawdown (2.2%)
- $300K account: $5,750 max drawdown (1.9%)
The percentage gets STRICTER on larger accounts. A $300K account with 1.9% drawdown is significantly harder to manage than a $50K with 5%. Bigger accounts aren’t automatically “easier” — they require tighter risk management per dollar of buying power.
Daily loss limit interaction: Many firms layer a daily loss limit (DLL) on top of max drawdown. The DLL is an intraday cap (e.g., -$1,250 per day on a $50K account) that trips before the max drawdown can. Hitting the DLL ends the account just as surely as hitting max drawdown.
Worked example
Three accounts, same trader, same trades, different drawdown models:
Trader: $50K eval. Drawdown amount: $2,500. Trades 3 days:
- Day 1: Open $50K, peak $51,000, close $50,500
- Day 2: Open $50,500, peak $52,500, close $50,800
- Day 3: Open $50,800, peak $50,900, close $48,200 (sharp loss into close)
Live trailing (Apex Intraday):
- Day 2 peak $52,500 → floor moves to $50,000.
- Day 3 close $48,200. Below floor $50,000. BREACH.
EOD trailing (Apex EOD or TPT Test):
- Day 1 close $50,500 → floor moves to $48,000.
- Day 2 close $50,800 → floor moves to $48,300.
- Day 3 close $48,200. Below floor $48,300. BREACH.
Static drawdown (Lucid):
- Floor fixed at $47,500 from day 1.
- Day 3 close $48,200. Above floor $47,500. SURVIVES.
Same trader, same trades, same headline drawdown amount. Live trailing fails on day 3 by a comfortable margin. EOD trailing fails on day 3 by a hair. Static drawdown survives day 3 by $700. The model is the determinant, not the number.
Max Drawdown vs related concepts
Side-by-side comparison of Max Drawdown against the most commonly confused alternatives.
| Concept | Definition | Category |
|---|---|---|
| Max Drawdown this term | The total dollar amount your account can lose from its highest point (or starting balance) before the account is automatically closed. | Rules & Risk |
| Trailing Drawdown | A drawdown limit that follows your account's high water mark, tightening as you profit and capping your maximum loss from peak balance — the dominant risk model in the futures prop firm industry. | Rules & Risk |
| EOD Drawdown | A trailing drawdown that updates only at the end of the trading day based on closing balance, ignoring intraday peaks — significantly more forgiving than intraday trailing. | Rules & Risk |
| Live Trailing Drawdown | A trailing drawdown that updates in real time on every tick of unrealized profit, including intraday peaks — the most punishing drawdown variant. | Rules & Risk |
| Static Drawdown | A drawdown limit fixed at a single dollar amount below starting balance that does not move up as the account grows — the simplest and most predictable drawdown model. | Rules & Risk |
| Daily Loss Limit | A cap on how much an account can lose in a single trading session — independent of cumulative drawdown — designed to prevent one bad day from ending the account. | Rules & Risk |
| Rule Breach | Any violation of a prop firm's trading rules — some breaches are warnings, others permanently end the account. | Rules & Risk |
How major prop firms handle Max Drawdown
Every firm implements max drawdown differently. Here's the firm-by-firm breakdown — DGT-trusted firms surface first, with implementation notes for each.
| Firm | How they handle it | Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Apex Trader Funding DGT TRUSTED | Max drawdown $2,500 on $50K, $5,750 on $300K (varies by tier). Trader chooses EOD or Intraday at evaluation purchase (post-March 2026). Locks at starting + $100 once threshold reached. Single drawdown rule — no separate daily loss limit on most products. | |
| Take Profit Trader DGT TRUSTED | Max drawdown varies by Test/PRO/PRO+ phase. Test uses EOD trailing. PRO uses intraday trailing (the dangerous switch). PRO+ uses EOD again. $2,000 buffer/drawdown on $50K accounts is typical. | |
| Tradeify DGT TRUSTED | Max drawdown varies by product (Growth, Select, Lightning). EOD trailing is standard on Select Funded. Lightning Funded uses lower drawdown amounts paired with faster scaling — verify per-product on tradeify.co. | |
| Lucid Trading DGT TRUSTED | Max drawdown applies on Lucid funded products. Some products offer static drawdown from day 1, which is structurally more forgiving than trailing variants. | |
| FundedNext DGT TRUSTED | Max drawdown varies by account product on the futures vertical. Verify exact mechanics on fundednext.com per product. |
Why traders fail Max Drawdown
Sizing positions to max drawdown rather than daily ATR. A trader with $2,500 of room sometimes thinks they can take a $2,000 trade with a $500 stop. But that’s 80% of total risk on one trade. Risk per trade should be 1-2% of account, not 80% of drawdown.
Confusing max drawdown with max loss per day. Max drawdown is cumulative — it’s the floor for the entire account life. Daily loss limit is per-day. They’re different rules, often layered together. Hitting either ends the account.
Not knowing whether your drawdown is intraday or EOD. Same firm can use different models on different account types (TPT Test = EOD, TPT PRO = intraday). Always confirm which model applies to YOUR specific account before placing trades.
Trying to “reset” the floor by closing positions early. The drawdown floor doesn’t reset based on your actions — it’s set by the firm’s high water mark calculation. Closing all positions doesn’t unset the trailing peak that triggered the latest floor move. The floor only changes when YOUR mark-to-market sets a new high (or stays stable, depending on model).
Frequently asked questions about Max Drawdown
What happens if I hit max drawdown?
The account closes immediately and permanently. Open positions are flat-closed by the firm, the dashboard shows account-failed status, and you cannot recover the account. To continue trading the firm, you must purchase a new evaluation (or reset the failed evaluation if it's still in eval phase).
Is max drawdown the same as daily loss limit?
No. Max drawdown is the cumulative cap (account life). Daily loss limit (DLL) is the per-day cap. Many firms use both — the DLL prevents you from hitting max drawdown in a single day, while max drawdown prevents account life from continuing past the floor.
Why are larger accounts proportionally stricter on drawdown?
Apex's $300K account has $5,750 drawdown (1.9%) vs $50K with $2,500 (5%). The math is intentional — bigger accounts have more buying power, so the firm wants tighter risk management per dollar deployed. Don't assume bigger = easier.
Does max drawdown count unrealized P&L?
Under live (intraday) trailing: YES, every tick of unrealized P&L can move the floor. Under EOD: only closing balance counts (which includes realized + unrealized at close). Under static: only realized P&L matters since the floor is fixed.
Can I check my distance to max drawdown in real time?
Most firms display a "drawdown buffer" or "trailing balance" in the trading dashboard, updated continuously. Apex's Apex dashboard shows trailing threshold. TPT's shows current drawdown floor. Always check before trade entry, especially on volatile sessions.