
@aw_trades_ Says He Is Up $20,000 on a MyFundedFutures Live Account
On June 12, the trader @aw_trades_ posted on X that he is up about $20,000 on his MyFundedFutures live account over the past couple of weeks, and asked other funded traders how they structure their withdrawals.
The post is framed as a question rather than a payout receipt. @aw_trades_ writes that he is accustomed to evaluation accounts, where the workflow is to hit a payout objective and request the maximum, and is now learning how to pay himself from a live funded account. The figure he cites, roughly $20,000 in unrealized or realized account gains, is self-reported and refers to account performance, not to a processed withdrawal.
MyFundedFutures, founded in 2023 and based in Texas, runs US futures evaluations across CME, CBOT, NYMEX, and COMEX. The firm reports profit splits ranging from 80/20 to 90/10 depending on plan, with the Rapid plan at 90/10, and payout caps that vary by plan, from $5,000 per cycle on Core to a $100,000 cumulative cap on Pro. That structure is the context behind the trader's question: the maximum he can pull at once depends on which plan funded his live account.

“im up about $20k on my @MyFundedFutures live account in the past couple weeks”— @aw_trades_ on X, June 12
The proof does not establish several specifics that readers may want. The post does not disclose the account size, the instruments traded, the strategy, or the plan tier. It also does not document a completed payout, only an account balance gain the trader is now considering how to withdraw. Per firm-stated rules, MyFundedFutures pays through Rise or Plaid and ACH rather than Wise, which is the practical answer to the workflow question @aw_trades_ raises.
What the post does offer is a candid snapshot of the moment between earning on a live account and actually moving cash out, a step that traders coming from evaluation challenges often underestimate. The $20,000 figure is meaningful only as the trader's own statement; the value of the post is the visibility it gives to that transition, not a verified withdrawal certificate.