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My Funded Futures Rule Review

My Funded Futures rule profile covering futures access, Flex, Rapid, and Pro account models, drawdown modes, news restrictions, payout cadence, and strategy fit.

Trustpilot 4.9 16,858 reviews Checked 2026-04-30

My Funded Futures Rule Profile

My Funded Futures is tracked in AskPropfirm as a futures-focused prop firm with Flex, Rapid, and Pro account models. The current local data is useful because it separates several rules traders often confuse: end-of-day drawdown versus real-time trailing drawdown, unrestricted news access versus Tier 1 news restrictions, and fast payout language versus the conditions needed to qualify.

Use this page as a rule map, not as live legal or checkout terms. Prop firm rules can change, and My Funded Futures should always be checked against the official site before buying, trading, or requesting a payout.

What is My Funded Futures?

My Funded Futures, often shortened to MFFU in the local data, is a prop firm built around futures trading. The AskPropfirm source snapshot lists the brand as active and last updated on 2026-05-01. Hub data also stores a Trustpilot snapshot of 4.9 from 16,858 reviews, last checked on 2026-04-30. Treat that review number as a stored reputation signal, not a live rating.

The confirmed market in the data is futures. The source mentions a direct futures trading environment and references common futures platforms and routing options, including Tradovate, Rithmic, NinjaTrader, Quantower, and TradingView. Platform availability should still be confirmed at checkout because access can depend on account type, region, and the current firm setup.

The main decision is not only whether My Funded Futures is popular. The better question is which account model fits your strategy, because Flex, Rapid, and Pro are described with different drawdown behavior, news rules, payout timing, and scaling expectations.

Quick Verdict

My Funded Futures may fit futures traders who want a firm with multiple account styles instead of a single evaluation path. Flex appears more forgiving around Tier 1 news, Rapid appears built for a quicker payout route with real-time trailing drawdown, and Pro appears positioned for traders who want EOD drawdown and a more advanced payout path.

The biggest risk is choosing the wrong drawdown model. A trader who expects Flex-style end-of-day protection may be surprised by Rapid's real-time trailing drawdown. The second major risk is news trading: the local data says Flex allows Tier 1 news, while Rapid and Pro restrict positions around CPI, FOMC, and NFP windows.

Who My Funded Futures Fits

  • Futures traders who compare firms by drawdown mode, payout rules, and news restrictions.
  • Traders who understand the difference between EOD drawdown and real-time trailing drawdown.
  • Traders who can follow account-specific news restrictions.
  • Traders who want to compare Flex, Rapid, and Pro before selecting an account.
  • Traders who value platform choices such as Tradovate, NinjaTrader, Quantower, TradingView, and Rithmic, subject to official confirmation.

Who Should Pause

  • Traders who need unrestricted Tier 1 news trading on every account model.
  • Traders who dislike real-time trailing drawdown and might accidentally choose a Rapid-style account.
  • Traders who rely on automated grid systems, cross-account hedging, account sharing, or location masking.
  • Traders who need country access, KYC handling, platform availability, and payout method confirmed before buying.
  • Traders looking only for a discount code; this is a brand rule profile, not a coupon page.

Markets, Platforms, And Access

  • Markets in current data: futures.
  • Instruments: futures instruments are implied, but the exact live instrument list is not confirmed in the structured source.
  • Platforms mentioned in the source: Tradovate, Rithmic, NinjaTrader, Quantower, and TradingView.
  • Language: English is listed.
  • Headquarters: the source mentions the United States, with support operations in Texas.
  • Country restrictions: not confirmed in the current local data.

The data does not include a structured blocked-country list. That matters because payment access, KYC approval, payout provider availability, and platform permissions can be location-sensitive.

Account Models And Rule Structure

The local source describes three main account models: Flex, Rapid, and Pro. The most important differences are drawdown mode, news permission, account sizes, and payout cadence.

Account modelAccount sizes in sourceProfit targetDrawdown modeNews trading
Flex$50K only$3,000EODTier 1 news allowed
Rapid$50K, $100K, $150K$3,000 / $6,000 / $9,000Real-time trailingTier 1 news restricted
Pro$50K, $100K, $150K$3,000 / $6,000 / $9,000EODTier 1 news restricted

The source says daily drawdown is none across these models. That does not mean the account has no risk limit. It means the risk check shifts toward max drawdown, drawdown calculation type, consistency, and any account-specific payout buffer.

Drawdown Rules

The most useful rule distinction in My Funded Futures is the drawdown basis:

Account modelMax drawdown in sourceDrawdown behavior
Flex$2,000End-of-day drawdown
Rapid$3,000Real-time trailing drawdown
Pro$4,500End-of-day drawdown

The source describes Flex and Pro as using end-of-day drawdown, adjusted around the close of the trading day. This is usually easier for traders to understand because intraday open profit does not necessarily move the drawdown threshold in the same way a real-time model does.

Rapid is different. The source describes Rapid as a real-time trailing account where intraday highs can move the drawdown limit. This is the model that can surprise traders who scale too aggressively after a temporary profit spike. If you trade Rapid, you need to know not only your daily result but also how your peak balance affects the trailing threshold.

Consistency And Scaling

The local data repeatedly references a 50% consistency rule during evaluation. The practical meaning is that a single large winning day should not represent too much of the total evaluation profit. The source also frames consistency as part of the firm's attempt to avoid lucky one-day passes and high-stakes gambling behavior.

Scaling is described through profit milestones and contract unlocks. One example in the source says a $50K account reaching $1,500 profit can move from 2 minis to 3 minis. Treat that example as a stored rule snippet, then verify the current scaling table for your exact account type before trading.

The key point: more contracts are not simply a reward. They also increase the chance that a drawdown or consistency mistake becomes account-ending.

News Trading Rules

News trading depends on the account model:

Account modelNews rule in current data
FlexNews trading allowed, including Tier 1 events
RapidTier 1 news restricted
ProTier 1 news restricted

For Rapid and Pro, the source says traders should not have open positions or place trades two minutes before and two minutes after Tier 1 releases such as CPI, FOMC, and NFP. That is a narrow window, but it is serious because violating news restrictions can turn an otherwise profitable account into a failed account.

If your strategy depends on entering volatility events, Flex may be the only model in the current source that appears aligned. If your strategy avoids high-impact news entirely, Rapid or Pro may still be viable, but the drawdown mode and payout rules become the bigger decision points.

Trading Restrictions To Confirm

The current local data includes several restrictions or risk flags to confirm:

  • Grid trading is listed as not allowed.
  • Hedging in opposite directions across MFFU accounts is listed as not allowed.
  • Account sharing is not allowed.
  • Sudden IP or location changes may trigger KYC or AML security review.
  • Scalping is described as allowed when manual or semi-automated.
  • EA or broader automation policy is not fully confirmed beyond the grid-trading note.
  • VPN policy is not fully confirmed, but IP consistency is clearly a concern in the source.

These restrictions matter because prop firm account failures often come from behavior rules rather than profit target math. Before buying, verify whether your execution method, copy setup, automation, device usage, and location pattern are allowed.

Payouts And Profit Split

The source describes My Funded Futures as having a competitive payout setup, but the details vary by model.

  • Profit split: 100% of the first $10,000 is described as yours, then 80% afterward.
  • Flex payout cadence: weekly in the source table.
  • Rapid payout cadence: daily in the source table, with another snippet describing payouts as quickly as every five winning days for Core/Rapid.
  • Pro payout cadence: bi-weekly in the source table, with a snippet also mentioning payouts in as little as 24 hours for Pro accounts.
  • Payout provider: Rise is mentioned for worldwide distribution.
  • Payout methods: Rise, crypto, bank wire, and ACH are mentioned.
  • Purchase payment methods: credit/debit card, Google Pay, and Apple Pay are mentioned.

Because the source snippets contain both “daily,” “weekly,” “bi-weekly,” and “24 to 48 hours” language in different contexts, AskPropfirm treats payout timing as account-specific and requiring confirmation. Do not assume the fastest payout language applies to every account.

Fees And Commission Notes

The local data says My Funded Futures runs a futures-style execution environment where commissions matter for high-frequency strategies. The source mentions roughly $0.50 per side for micro contracts and $2.50 per side for standard mini contracts. It also says commissions are deducted immediately after trade execution, so profit and loss reflects trading cost in real time.

The source also says there is no conventional activation fee on any account types. Verify that at checkout before relying on it, because fee structures can change and may differ by promotion, account type, or region.

Strategy Fit

My Funded Futures may be a strong fit for disciplined futures traders who can choose an account model around their actual behavior:

  • Choose Flex-style logic if Tier 1 news access and EOD drawdown are central to the strategy.
  • Choose Rapid-style logic only if you understand real-time trailing drawdown and can manage peak-balance risk.
  • Choose Pro-style logic if you want EOD drawdown but can respect Tier 1 news restrictions and payout buffers.

It may be a poor fit for traders who overleverage around economic news, expect every account to behave like EOD drawdown, use grid systems, or trade from changing locations without understanding KYC implications.

Alternatives To Compare

  • Apex Trader Funding for another futures-focused firm with detailed trailing drawdown and PA payout rules.
  • Topstep for a long-running futures evaluation firm with its own drawdown and funded-account structure.
  • Alpha Futures for another futures profile to verify as AskPropfirm expands coverage.
  • Take Profit Trader for another futures prop firm with a large review footprint in Hub.

Final Rule-First Verdict

My Funded Futures stands out in the current AskPropfirm queue because it is both popular in Hub data and clearly futures-focused. The useful buying decision is not whether the brand is visible; it is whether Flex, Rapid, or Pro matches how you trade.

The safest approach is to decide the drawdown model first, confirm the news rule second, and only then compare payout speed or account fee. A trader who misunderstands Rapid's real-time trailing drawdown or Pro's Tier 1 news restriction could pass the wrong account into a rule failure. A trader who matches the account model to the strategy has a clearer path to evaluating the firm fairly.

Always confirm the current My Funded Futures rulebook, platform access, country availability, fees, payout method, and news calendar policy directly on the official site before buying or trading.

FAQ

Is My Funded Futures a futures prop firm?

Yes. The current AskPropfirm source tracks My Funded Futures as a futures-focused prop firm.

What account models does My Funded Futures offer?

The current local data describes Flex, Rapid, and Pro account models.

What is the main drawdown difference?

Flex and Pro are described as using end-of-day drawdown, while Rapid is described as using real-time trailing drawdown.

Does My Funded Futures allow news trading?

The source says Flex allows Tier 1 news trading, while Rapid and Pro restrict Tier 1 events such as CPI, FOMC, and NFP with a two-minute before and after window.

What platforms are mentioned for My Funded Futures?

The source mentions Tradovate, Rithmic, NinjaTrader, Quantower, and TradingView. Confirm current platform access before checkout.

What is the profit split?

The local data says traders keep 100% of the first $10,000 and 80% afterward. Verify the current payout terms for your account model.

Are grid trading and hedging allowed?

Grid trading is listed as not allowed. Hedging in opposite directions across MFFU accounts is also listed as not allowed.

What should traders verify before buying?

Verify account model, drawdown type, news restrictions, platform access, commission impact, payout timing, country eligibility, and KYC or IP-security rules.