NUMAGERA

Funded trading rules

After the evaluation, the rules get simpler.

Drawdowns and the leverage cap stay. Profit targets do not.

Trading rules at a glance

Same risk rules, no more pressure to hit targets

RuleCondition
Profit targetNone
Max daily loss-5% from equity at 00:00 UTC
Peak loss-10% from the aequity peak
Max loss per position2% of account size
Minimum trading days
Time limitNone
LeverageAuto-leveraged account by default
Profit split80-90%
Payoutsmin $50, no schedule
Account scalingWeekly

Rules in detail

Simple terms: each with a clear description and the reason it exists

  1. Max daily loss

    Account equity may not fall more than 5% of the account size below the equity recorded at 00:00 UTC. Touching the threshold fails the funded account immediately. At the next 00:00 UTC the allowance recalculates from the new day-start equity, whether the previous day closed in profit, flat, or at a loss.

    Why this matters

    A 5% intraday daily loss limit stops a single bad session from turning into a deep drawdown. The limit counts floating PnL on open positions, not just realized losses, so a losing trade cannot be held through the UTC rollover to escape the day's cap.

  2. Peak loss

    Account equity may not fall more than 10% of the account size below its all-time peak. As the account grows, the floor moves up with the peak. Touching the threshold fails the funded account immediately.

    Why this matters

    Peak loss locks in profit as the account grows. Each new equity high raises the failure floor, and the cushion below it stays the same size. Losing money already booked is the most pointless way to fail.

  3. Max loss per position

    No single position may run a loss deeper than 2% of the account size. Touching the threshold closes the position and fails the funded account immediately, the same way the daily and peak limits do.

    Why this matters

    The daily limit caps a session; the per-position limit caps a single decision. It keeps one stubborn trade from doing a day's worth of damage and takes averaging into a loser off the table.

  4. Auto-leverage

    Funded accounts are auto-leveraged by default. AI risk management sets the account's effective leverage from the trader's trading style and adjusts buying power in real time. There is no leverage dial to manage: sizing follows the buying power available at the moment, and orders beyond it never reach the exchange.

    Why this matters

    Leverage on a funded account is part of risk management, not a way to size up a bet. Buying power contracts through a drawdown and rebuilds as results return, so exposure stays in proportion to current form.

  5. Profit split

    Traders keep 80% on $5K–25K accounts, 85% on $25K–100K, and 90% on $100K and above. The split rises automatically as the account scales through each size.

    Why this matters

    Running a large account well should pay well. The split grows with the capital so the trader's share keeps up with the size of the results.

  6. Payouts

    A payout can be requested at any time, with no cooldown, if the account is in profit since the last scaling check and there are no open positions. The minimum request is $50. There is no upper limit. Each request clears within the standard withdrawal window.

    Why this matters

    The profit condition limits payouts to money actually earned on the account. The no-open-positions rule excludes floating PnL from the calculation. The $50 minimum keeps transaction fees proportional to payout size. No upper limit means large payouts go out in a single request.

  7. Account scaling

    Every Sunday the system checks each funded account, settles the profit split on the retained profit, and adds 5× the remaining profit to the account size. Retained profit is the profit earned since the last scaling check that has not been withdrawn through a payout.

    Scaling applies only to accounts with no open positions and no pending payout request at the time of the check, so floating PnL is not counted. The increase is capped at +$20K per week and $200K total account size.

    Full mechanics and a worked example are on the Account Scaling page.

    Why this matters

    Scaling is calculated from retained profit, so withdrawn amounts don't count toward the next size increase. The no-open-positions rule excludes floating PnL from the calculation.

  8. Restricted practices

    Identical or hedged positions across multiple accounts are not allowed. Account sharing, identity fraud, and market manipulation are not allowed either. The same applies to exploiting platform glitches, data-feed errors, latency arbitrage, or any other weakness in the infrastructure.

    Any violation voids the affected payout cycle and can fail the funded account, even if every numeric rule was met.

    Why this matters

    The capital is there to back traders who can grow it themselves, so that both sides make money. Anything that drains the system without producing real trading results has no place here.

Funded account questions

Most common topics about funded accounts

A funded account belongs to the firm and uses the firm's capital. After passing evaluation, the trader gets access to it through the firm's platform. The trader earns a share of the profit it makes, paid out as a payout.

Pass once, scale weekly

Past evaluation, the account grows weekly with on-demand payouts