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End of Day vs Intraday Trailing Drawdown: What Funded Traders Need to Know

If you trade a funded or evaluation account, the single number that decides whether you keep trading isn't your P&L — it's your distance to the drawdown limit. And how that limit moves depends entirely on one setting: whether your prop firm uses end of day or intraday trailing drawdown.

Get this wrong and you can be perfectly profitable on paper while your account quietly closes underneath you. This post breaks down both models, shows exactly where accounts break, and explains how PropLedger loads your firm's specific logic so you always know where the line sits.

What a Trailing Drawdown Actually Is

A trailing drawdown is a threshold that follows your account balance (or equity) upward as you make new highs, but does not follow it back down when you give profits back. It's the mechanism prop firms use to protect capital during evaluations and funded phases.

Two variables define how any trailing drawdown behaves:

  1. What it tracks — closed balance vs. open equity (including unrealized P&L).
  2. When it updates — at the end of the trading day, or continuously in real time.

The combination of those two variables is where end of day and intraday drawdown diverge.

End of Day (EOD) Trailing Drawdown

An end of day trailing drawdown recalculates your threshold once per day, typically at the session close, based on your closed balance at that point.

How It Calculates

Say you have a 50K account with a $2,500 trailing drawdown. Your threshold starts at $47,500.

  • You trade during the day, spiking up to +$1,800 in unrealized profit at one point.
  • You close the session at +$900.
  • At the EOD recalculation, your new high-water mark is based on the closed balance of $50,900.
  • Your new threshold trails to $48,400.

The key detail: that intraday spike to +$1,800 never counted. Only the end-of-day closed number moved your limit.

Why Traders Prefer It

EOD models give you room to breathe intraday. You can let a trade run, take heat, and manage the position without every tick dragging your threshold up. The limit only firms up once, on the closed number.

Intraday Trailing Drawdown

An intraday trailing drawdown updates in real time, and on most firms it tracks your open equity — meaning unrealized profit counts toward moving your threshold higher.

How It Calculates

Same 50K account, same $2,500 drawdown, starting threshold $47,500.

  • You spike to +$1,800 unrealized during the day.
  • At that exact moment, your high-water mark is $51,800.
  • Your threshold trails up to $49,300 — instantly.
  • The trade reverses and you close the day at +$900 ($50,900).
  • Your threshold stays at $49,300, because it trailed the peak and does not retreat.

Here's the trap: you closed the day green at +$900, but your usable buffer is now smaller than it would have been under EOD, because the drawdown chased your unrealized peak.

Where Intraday Accounts Break

The classic failure isn't a bad closing day — it's a round trip. You run a trade into big unrealized profit, the threshold ratchets up to that peak, then the market reverses and takes you back down through the now-higher limit. On paper you never even booked a loss for the session. The account still breaches.

EOD vs Intraday: Side by Side

FactorEnd of DayIntraday
Update frequencyOnce at session closeContinuous, real time
Tracks unrealized P&LUsually noUsually yes
Intraday spikes move limitNoYes
Round-trip riskLowerHigher
Buffer during a tradeMore stableTightens as you profit

Why the Exact Rule Depends on Your Firm and Account Size

This is where most traders get burned: the drawdown model is not a blanket firm setting. It varies by firm, by account size, and sometimes by account phase.

An Apex 25K Evaluation does not carry the same threshold behavior as a 100K Apex account. MyFundedFutures, Topstep, Take Profit Trader, and Tradeify each define their own trailing logic, reset conditions, and whether the drawdown freezes once you clear the initial balance plus buffer.

Assuming your 50K account behaves like a friend's 150K — or that this firm works like your last firm — is exactly how a compliant, profitable session ends in a breach.

How PropLedger Tracks Both Models

PropLedger is built around this problem. Instead of forcing you to do drawdown math in your head mid-session, it loads the exact rules for your firm and account size and applies the correct calculation logic automatically.

Automatic Trade Logging

The Chrome extension logs your trades directly from Tradovate, so your trade history builds itself without manual entry. Every fill feeds the same ledger your drawdown tracking runs on.

Distance-to-Limit Tracking

PropLedger shows your current distance to your drawdown limit based on your specific model. If your account uses an intraday trailing drawdown, the tool reflects how unrealized peaks affect your threshold. If it's EOD, it reflects the once-daily recalculation. You see the buffer that actually applies to your account — not a generic estimate.

Statistical Analytics on Your Own History

Beyond the live threshold, PropLedger runs statistical probability analytics on your own trade history. That means you can study how your typical intraday excursions, hold times, and give-back patterns interact with your firm's drawdown structure — using your real data, not hypotheticals.

What to Check Right Now

Before your next session, confirm three things about your account:

1. Which model your account uses

EOD or intraday — verify it against your current firm documentation, not memory.

2. Whether it tracks balance or equity

This determines whether your unrealized profit moves the threshold.

3. When (and if) the drawdown stops trailing

Many accounts freeze the threshold once you exceed the starting balance plus the drawdown amount. Knowing that ceiling changes how you read your buffer.

Bottom Line

End of day and intraday trailing drawdowns can produce very different outcomes from the identical set of trades. EOD rewards a clean close; intraday punishes round trips off an unrealized peak. The only way to trade your account with clarity is to know which model applies to your exact firm and size — and to have that math tracked for you as you go. That's the job PropLedger is built to do.

Disclaimer: PropLedger is a trade-journaling tool, not financial advice. Prop firm rules change frequently — always confirm the current rules with your firm. Trading futures involves substantial risk of loss.

Statistics are calculated from your personal trade history only. Past performance does not predict future results. PropLedger does not provide financial advice, signals, or performance guarantees.