
@birdzho Clears $3,000 Payout Across Two 50K Apex Accounts
On June 30, 2026, X user @birdzho posted a payout confirmation from Apex Trader Funding covering two 50K accounts. The combined approval totaled $3,000, and the trader described the moment as the end of a long stretch without a successful cashout.
Trader @birdzho took to X on June 30, 2026 to share a moment of long awaited relief. After what the trader described as a stretch of grinding without a successful cashout, the payout request tied to two 50K Apex Trader Funding accounts finally cleared. The combined approval, dated June 2026, totaled $3,000 across the two accounts, and the certificate image attached to the post documented the moment.
The post itself was short and joyful. "Yeyy after long time i succeeded to make a payout from 2x50k Apex accounts and it was approved for 5 seconds," the trader wrote, adding, "I love this feeling!" The specific mention of a five second approval window suggests the trader was watching the payout portal in real time when the status flipped from pending to approved, a small detail that will resonate with anyone who has refreshed a dashboard waiting for confirmation.

“Yeyy after long time i succeeded to make a payout from 2x50k Apex accounts and it was approved for 5 seconds. I love this feeling!”— @birdzho on X, June 30, 2026
There is no mention of instruments traded, session preferences, or strategy in the source post, and the trader did not disclose how long the accounts had been active before this cashout. What the post does establish clearly is scale: two 50K evaluation accounts running in parallel, each contributing to the same approval cycle. Apex Trader Funding permits participants to hold multiple funded accounts under one profile, and payouts are processed through the member portal on documented cycles, which is the framework this proof sits inside of.
The screenshot shared alongside the tweet functions as the visual receipt for the $3,000 figure. For traders evaluating whether to stack multiple evaluation accounts of the same size, @birdzho's post is a data point rather than a promise. The result reflects one trader's outcome on a specific approval date and does not describe a repeatable system or edge. Anyone considering a similar setup should weigh the cost of running parallel evaluations against their own risk tolerance and trading history.