What is Trailing Drawdown?

Traders who blow a prop firm evaluation don't blow it with a single bad trade. They blow it because they didn't understand exactly how their risk limit worked — until it was too late.
Trailing drawdown is the rule that catches more traders off guard than any other. Here's what it actually is, how it behaves during a live session, and what changes when you move to a funded account.
What is trailing drawdown?
Trailing drawdown is a maximum loss limit that moves upward as your account equity grows — but never moves back down.
Say your account starts at $50,000 with a $2,500 trailing drawdown. Your high-water mark is $50,000, so your floor sits at $47,500. You run the account up to $53,000. Your floor now trails up to $50,500. You never get back the $2,500 gap — it just relocates higher.
The critical implication: profits don't create more room to lose. They raise the floor. A strong morning can actually put you in a tighter position by the afternoon if you give back gains, because your limit followed you up but you've since come down.
This is what makes trailing drawdown one of the most misunderstood rules in prop trading. It's not just a loss limit — it's a dynamic one, and how prop firms apply it varies across the industry. It requires a different approach to position sizing and trade management than a static limit does.
Trailing drawdown vs static drawdown
The alternative to trailing drawdown is static drawdown — a fixed floor that doesn't move regardless of how your account performs.
With a $50,000 account and a $2,500 static drawdown, your floor is $47,500 on day one and $47,500 on the day you hit $60,000. Profits give you more breathing room because the gap between your equity and the floor widens as you grow.
With trailing drawdown:
The floor follows your equity peak upward — every new high relocates your limit
Profits raise the floor, not your buffer
The tightest point is after a strong run, when a pullback eats into the margin you just created
With static drawdown:
The floor is fixed from day one and never moves
Profits widen the gap between your equity and the limit
The tightest point is at the start, before any gains have built a cushion
Neither is objectively better — they reward different strengths. Trailing drawdown is unforgiving of complacency after a winning streak. Static drawdown demands you survive the early stages without the cushion of growth.
How trailing drawdown works across Vanquish accounts
Vanquish uses trailing drawdown during the evaluation phase, with the specific mechanics depending on which account type you're in.
Basic options accounts use intraday trailing drawdown. Your high-water mark updates in real time throughout the session. Every tick your account moves to a new peak, the floor follows immediately. This means the positions you hold matter minute to minute — an open unrealised gain that pulls back can shift your available risk even if you haven't closed the trade.
Advanced options accounts — which support multi-leg strategies — use end-of-day trailing drawdown. The high-water mark only updates at the close of each trading day, based on your closing equity. Intraday fluctuations don't move the floor. This gives more room to manage complex positions during the session without your limit shifting underneath you, which makes it a better fit for strategies that require time and space to develop.
Once you pass your evaluation and move onto a performance account, the drawdown structure changes entirely. Performance accounts use static drawdown — a fixed floor that stays put regardless of how the account grows. At that point, every dollar of profit genuinely expands your working margin. The rules that tested your discipline during the evaluation give way to a structure that rewards consistent growth. You can compare evaluation and performance account structures in full before choosing which path suits your trading style.
What this means for how you trade
Understanding your drawdown type isn't just administrative — it should shape your process.
On a trailing drawdown account, the priority after a strong run is protecting the gains that just moved your floor. Walking away flat after a good morning is a better outcome than pressing and giving back half of it. The floor followed you up; a reversal costs real risk capacity.
On a static drawdown account, the early sessions carry the most risk. You're working with the narrowest buffer before any profits have built a cushion. Keeping position size conservative at the start — before you've created margin to absorb variance — is the difference between surviving a cold start and not.
Drawdown rules don't exist to trip you up. They exist to mirror the conditions that real money management demands. Understanding exactly which version you're working with is the first step to trading within your parameters rather than against them.