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Trailing Drawdown, Explained: Why a 25K Apex Is Not a 100K Apex

If you have ever blown a funded account without a single catastrophic trade, trailing drawdown is almost certainly the reason. It is the quietest, most misunderstood rule in the prop-firm world, and it ends more evaluations than any blown stop ever will. Understanding precisely how it moves — and how it differs between a 25K Apex and a 100K Apex — is the difference between trading with a clear margin and trading blind.

What trailing drawdown actually is

A trailing drawdown is a loss limit that follows your account equity upward. When you start a 25K Apex evaluation, you might have a 1,500 dollar trailing drawdown. That means your account cannot fall 1,500 dollars below its highest point. The catch is in the word highest. As your balance climbs, the floor climbs with it — and on most Apex accounts, it trails your unrealized intraday high, not just your closed balance.

Picture a fresh 25K account with a 1,500 dollar trail. Your liquidation level sits at 23,500. You take a trade that runs 800 dollars in your favor intraday, peaking at 25,800, then you give some back and close the day at 25,400. On many Apex configurations, your drawdown floor has now trailed up to 24,300 — because it followed that 25,800 intraday peak, minus 1,500. You are up only 400 dollars on the day, but your room to lose has shrunk from 1,500 to 1,100.

Why the intraday peak matters so much

This is the part that catches disciplined traders off guard. You can have a green day and end it with less buffer than you started, simply because you let a winner run and then trailed your stop. The trailing mechanism does not care that you closed in profit. It locked onto your highest equity point and pulled the floor up behind it. Traders who scale out, who hold runners, or who let positions breathe are the most exposed — precisely the traders who think they are managing risk well.

Why size and firm change everything

Here is the trap that generic journals fall into: they treat all accounts the same. They do not. A 25K Apex evaluation and a 100K Apex evaluation have completely different trailing drawdown amounts, different profit targets, and sometimes different trailing behavior. MyFundedFutures handles its drawdown differently again — some plans trail to end-of-day balance rather than intraday peak, which is a fundamentally different game. Topstep, FTMO, and the rest each have their own logic.

If your journal applies a single hardcoded drawdown number to every account, it is lying to you. The only honest way to track distance to the line is to load the exact rule set for your exact firm, account size, and account type — and recompute your floor as your equity moves.

  • Know whether your drawdown trails intraday highs or only end-of-day balance.
  • Know the exact dollar amount for your specific account size — never assume.
  • Know when the trail stops moving (many accounts freeze the floor once you clear the starting balance plus the drawdown).
  • Watch your distance to the line, not just your daily profit.

How PropLedger tracks it

PropLedger asks for your firm, size, and account type at onboarding and loads the published rules for that exact combination. The drawdown gauge then shows your live distance to the line in dollars, shading amber as you approach 80 percent of the limit and red past 90. There is no guessing and no generic assumption — a 25K Apex reads its own numbers and a 100K Apex reads its own.

Trailing drawdown is not complicated once you can see it. It is only dangerous when it is invisible. Make it visible, and it stops being the rule that ends your account and becomes just another number you manage. Statistics shown in PropLedger are calculated from your personal trade history only and past performance does not predict future results.

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.