Martingale
A strategy that doubles position size after each loss to recover prior losses with a single win — universally banned or heavily restricted at prop firms due to catastrophic risk.
What is Martingale?
Martingale is a position-sizing strategy borrowed from gambling: after every loss, double the next bet to recover prior losses with a single win. The math works in theory: if you can survive infinite losses with infinite capital, you eventually win and recover everything. The math fails in practice because no trader has infinite capital.
Applied to futures trading: a trader who loses $500 doubles to a 4-contract position next trade trying to win $1,000. If that loses, double again to 8 contracts trying to win $2,000. The required win-amount grows geometrically while drawdown grows linearly. After 8 consecutive losses, the trader needs a 256-contract position to recover — far exceeding any prop firm’s max position size and any reasonable account’s drawdown.
Firms ban or restrict martingale because:
- Tail risk is unbounded — single bad streak destroys the account regardless of starting size
- Position size escalation often violates max position rules anyway
- It’s almost always a sign of emotional revenge trading, not strategic edge
- Firms have seen martingale blow more accounts than any other named pattern
How Martingale works
How firms detect martingale:
- Position size analysis: trader places 1 contract, loses, then 2 contracts, loses, then 4 contracts. Pattern flagged.
- Time-window analysis: rapid trades within minutes of losses showing escalating size
- Statistical analysis: trader’s average position size on losing-streak days vs. winning-streak days
- Manual review: customer service or risk team identifies obvious patterns from trade history
What the firm typically does on detection:
- Warning email on first detection
- Account flag for review on subsequent occurrences
- Payout denial if martingale led directly to a recoverable balance
- Account closure if pattern is sustained or extreme
The DCA gray area: Dollar-cost-averaging into losers (DCA) is sometimes allowed and is structurally similar to martingale on the surface. The difference: DCA implies a planned scaling-in approach with predefined size and stop, while martingale implies emotional doubling-down without plan. Apex explicitly allows DCA “applied consistently and responsibly” but restricts pure martingale doubling. Verify your firm’s specific DCA policy.
Worked example
Classic martingale blowup on a $50K account:
- Trade 1: 1 contract long ES, stops out -$250. Account: -$250.
- Trade 2: 2 contracts (doubling). Stops out -$500. Cumulative: -$750.
- Trade 3: 4 contracts. Stops out -$1,000. Cumulative: -$1,750.
- Trade 4: 8 contracts. Stops out -$2,000. Cumulative: -$3,750.
- Account drawdown limit: $2,500. BREACH on trade 4.
4 consecutive losses (a normal occurrence in any trading strategy with 50% win rate) destroys the account. The strategy survives only as long as no streak of bad luck occurs — and bad streaks always occur eventually.
What the firm sees: Position sizes 1, 2, 4, 8 in immediate succession after losses. Pattern flagged automatically. Account closed via drawdown breach. Firm logs a martingale-attribution note that may affect future trader-side appeals.
Martingale vs related concepts
Side-by-side comparison of Martingale against the most commonly confused alternatives.
| Concept | Definition | Category |
|---|---|---|
| Martingale this term | A strategy that doubles position size after each loss to recover prior losses with a single win — universally banned or heavily restricted at prop firms due to catastrophic risk. | Strategies |
| Automated Trading | Trading executed by computer algorithms rather than manual orders — explicitly allowed at some prop firms (Lucid, Tradeify) and restricted at others. | Strategies |
| Rule Breach | Any violation of a prop firm's trading rules — some breaches are warnings, others permanently end the account. | Rules & Risk |
| Copy Trading | A trading approach where one source account's trades are automatically replicated across multiple destination accounts — heavily restricted at most prop firms. | Rules & Risk |
| Consistency Rule | A rule limiting how much of your total profit can come from a single trading day, designed to prevent payout cycles built on one lucky session. | Rules & Risk |
How major prop firms handle Martingale
Every firm implements martingale 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 | Pure martingale (doubling after losses) is restricted. DCA (planned scaling into positions) is allowed when applied consistently and responsibly. The distinction is intentional planned scaling vs. emotional revenge doubling. | |
| Take Profit Trader DGT TRUSTED | Martingale strategies that demonstrate clear loss-recovery doubling patterns are restricted. TPT does not have explicit per-strategy bans but flags revenge-trading patterns through risk monitoring. | |
| Tradeify DGT TRUSTED | Martingale-style doubling is restricted on Tradeify funded accounts. Reasonable averaging-in patterns with consistent sizing are generally accepted; emotional doubling after losses is flagged. | |
| Lucid Trading DGT TRUSTED | Even Lucid's permissive rule set restricts martingale specifically. Lucid allows almost every other automated strategy but explicitly excludes martingale doubling patterns. | |
| FundedNext DGT TRUSTED | Martingale strategies restricted on FundedNext's futures vertical. Verify specific policy on fundednext.com — restrictions may differ between forex and futures products. |
Why traders fail Martingale
Assuming “I just had bad luck” — it’s the strategy. Every trader who blows an account on martingale tells themselves they were one trade away from recovery. The math says the same losing streak that just blew you would inevitably happen again given enough trades.
Confusing DCA with martingale. DCA = planned scaling-in to a position with predefined stops. Martingale = emotional doubling after losses. Most firms allow DCA; few allow pure martingale.
Trying to disguise martingale by spreading across multiple instruments. Doubling on ES then doubling on NQ is still martingale from a risk-management perspective. Firms detect by trade size escalation, not by instrument identity.
Believing “I have edge so I won’t need to double many times.” Even at 60% win rate, a 5-loss streak occurs roughly once every 100 trades. With martingale, 5 losses in a row require 32x position size — typically illegal under max position rules and instantly account-ending under drawdown.
Frequently asked questions about Martingale
Are all forms of doubling-down banned?
No. DCA (planned scaling into positions with predefined stops) is allowed at most firms. What's banned is pure martingale: doubling specifically after losses with no plan, often as emotional revenge trading. The distinction matters.
Why is martingale considered so dangerous?
The math is unbounded. Even with 60% win rate, sequences of 5-8 losses in a row are statistically guaranteed over enough trades. Each loss requires 2x the prior position. After 8 losses you'd need 256x your starting position — far beyond any account's drawdown limit.
Can I run anti-martingale (doubling after wins)?
Generally yes. Firms restrict the after-loss doubling pattern specifically. Increasing size on a winning streak (when capital is genuinely growing) is normal aggressive sizing, not martingale.
Will martingale be detected automatically?
Modern prop firms have automated pattern detection for size escalation after consecutive losses. The pattern is one of the most reliably detected behaviors. Don't assume you can run it under the radar.
What happens if I accidentally martingale after a bad day?
A single instance is unlikely to trigger immediate action. Firms typically issue warnings on first detection. Sustained patterns over multiple days will escalate to account flags or payout denials. If you find yourself doubling after losses emotionally, stop trading — it's revenge trading, not strategy.