What is the Safety Net?
Think of the Safety Net as your account's "bumper." It is a minimum amount of profit that must remain in your account after you request a payout.
We have this rule for one simple reason: Longevity.
If you were to withdraw 100% of your profits and bring your balance back to exactly zero, a single losing trade the next morning would breach your drawdown and lose you the account. The Safety Net ensures you always have a cushion to handle market fluctuations after payday.
🛡️ Safety Net Thresholds
You can withdraw any profit that is above the specific Safety Net value for your account size.
Account Size | Required Safety Net | When can you withdraw? |
$25,000 | $1,500 | When profit > $1,500 |
$50,000 | $2,500 | When profit > $2,500 |
$100,000 | $3,500 | When profit > $3,500 |
$150,000 | $7,000 | When profit > $7,000 |
$300,000 | $9,000 | When profit > $9,000 |
$500,000 | $15,000 | When profit > $15,000 |
📝 A Real-World Example
Let’s say you are trading a $100,000 Account.
Looking at the table above, your Safety Net is $3,500.
You have a great week and your total profit hits $5,000.
You decide to request a payout.
The Calculation: $5,000 (Total Profit) – $3,500 (Safety Net) = $1,500.
The Result: You can withdraw $1,500 immediately. The remaining $3,500 stays in your account so you can continue trading the next day with plenty of room for drawdown.
Why do we do this?
We want you to keep your funded account for years, not weeks.
By enforcing a Safety Net, we prevent the "Withdraw & Blow" cycle where a trader cashes out, leaves $0 buffer, and loses the account on the very next trade. This policy protects your capital and keeps you in the game.
