Leeloo Trading $100,000 Account Rules
The Leeloo Trading $100,000 account has a $2,200 daily loss limit (2.2%), $3,000 max drawdown (trailing eod (floor moves up at end of day)), and a $6,000 profit target. The challenge fee is $245, with a minimum of 10 trading days required. Breach level is $97,000.
Last verified: 2026-03-21 | Official rules page
Leeloo Trading's $100,000 evaluation has a $2,200 daily loss limit (2.2%), $3,000 maximum drawdown (trailing eod (floor moves up at end of day)), and a $6,000 profit target. Minimum 10 trading days. Fee: $245.
| evaluation | funded | |
|---|---|---|
| Daily Loss | $2,200 (2.2%) | $2,200 (2.2%) |
| Max Drawdown | $3,000 | $3,000 |
| DD Type | Trailing EOD | Trailing EOD |
| Profit Target | $6,000 | None |
| Min Days | 10 | None |
| News Trading | allowed | allowed |
| Overnight | No | No |
You can lose max $2,200 in a single day.
Your account can never drop below $97,000.
If you grow to $101,000 by end of day, the floor moves up to $98,000. Your safety net stays the same size, but it follows you up.
At 1% risk per trade ($1,000), you can take 2 losing trades before hitting the daily limit.
Understanding how many consecutive losers your account can survive is the difference between passing and failing. Here is the math for the Leeloo Trading $100,000 account at different risk levels, based on the $3,000 max drawdown (trailing eod (floor moves up at end of day)).
| Risk Per Trade | Dollar Risk | Losers to Max DD | Losers to Daily Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5% | $500 | 6 | 4 |
| 1% | $1,000 | 3 | 2 |
| 1.5% | $1,500 | 2 | 1 |
| 2% | $2,000 | 1 | 1 |
| 3% | $3,000 | 1 | 0 |
At the commonly recommended 1% risk per trade ($1,000), you can absorb 3 consecutive losing trades before breaching the $3,000 max drawdown. However, the $2,200 daily loss limit means you can only take 2 losers in a single day before getting locked out. This is the constraint that bites most traders first.
Because Leeloo Trading uses trailing eod (floor moves up at end of day), profits do not create additional buffer. If you are up $4,000 and then start losing, you still only have $3,000 of drawdown room from your peak. This is why trailing drawdown firms require more conservative risk management.
Proper position sizing on the Leeloo Trading $100,000 account depends on your stop loss distance, the instrument you trade, and the rules you need to respect. Below are practical guidelines for this specific account.
Futures (ES / NQ micro and standard):
At 1% risk ($1,000) on the Micro E-mini S&P 500 (MES, $5/point), you can risk 200 points per contract, or trade 20 MES contracts with a 10-point stop. On the standard ES ($50/point), a 10-point stop means a $500 risk per contract, so you can trade 2 contracts at 1% risk. Daily limit of $2,200 means a maximum of 44 points of loss on 1 ES contract per day.
Conservative vs. aggressive sizing:
Conservative (0.5% risk): Risk $500 per trade. You can survive 6 consecutive losers before max drawdown. At a 2:1 reward-to-risk ratio, you need 6 winning trades (with no losers) to hit the $6,000 profit target.
Standard (1% risk): Risk $1,000 per trade. You can survive 3 consecutive losers. At a 2:1 reward-to-risk ratio, you need 3 winning trades to hit the target.
Aggressive (2% risk): Risk $2,000 per trade. Only 1 losers before breach. Just 1 losers hit the daily limit. Not recommended unless you have a proven win rate above 60%.
The key takeaway: on a $100,000 account with $3,000 max drawdown, trailing drawdown means you need to be especially disciplined because your floor follows your peak equity. Your profit target is $6,000 (6%), which means you need to earn 2.0x what you can afford to lose. Use the drawdown simulator to test different scenarios.
- +Frequent promotional sales (50-80% off)
- +EOD trailing drawdown
- +$25K account option for low entry
- +No consistency rule
- -Minimum 10 trading days required
- -No overnight holding
- -Trailing drawdown floor moves up
- -No TradingView support
Check a trade against Leeloo Trading's rules for the $100,000 account. No sign-up required.