
PipBack Flags Reported Flex 2.0 Payout Cap Cuts at MyFundedFutures
On June 12, X account @PipBack_com posted that MyFundedFutures quietly revised its Flex plan terms on May 14, 2026, reporting per-cycle payout caps cut by more than half on the $25K and $50K tiers, with the $50K cap moving from $5,000 to $2,000.
This post documents a third-party claim about a policy change rather than a completed payout to the poster. The $5,000 figure references a prior Flex $50K per-cycle cap, not a withdrawal received by @PipBack_com. Readers should verify current terms directly with MyFundedFutures.
The post, dated Friday June 12 on X, reports that MyFundedFutures rolled out a revision branded Flex 2.0 on May 14, 2026, without an accompanying email, tweet, or Discord notification. According to @PipBack_com, the change cut the per-cycle payout cap on the $25K Flex plan from $3,000 to $1,000 and on the $50K plan from $5,000 to $2,000. A $5,000 figure is referenced in connection with the previous $50K cap.
The post frames the finding as a tracking-tool catch rather than a documented withdrawal. No payout certificate, bank confirmation, or trader-side receipt is shown in the text supplied. The trader handle, the platform, the dated screenshot referenced in the thread, and the specific before-and-after cap numbers are the verifiable elements here. The account size tied to the $5,000 reference is the $50K Flex plan as reported by the poster, not a personal account belonging to @PipBack_com.

“My Funded Futures has silently slashed their Flex Plan payout caps by over 50%.”— @PipBack_com on X
For context, MyFundedFutures, founded in Texas in 2023, runs five plans with plan-dependent payout caps and splits ranging from 80/20 to 90/10. The firm has long stated that caps are plan-dependent, with the Core plan capped at $5,000 per cycle and the Pro plan at $100,000 cumulative. A reduction on the Flex tier, if accurate as reported, would tighten the per-cycle ceiling for traders on the two smallest Flex accounts and align them closer to entry-tier economics.
What this proof does not establish should be stated plainly. It does not document a completed payout to the poster, it does not confirm the instrument traded, and it does not show a strategy, holding period, or evaluation timeline. It is a claim about a policy change observed through a third-party tracker, not a receipt. Readers seeking confirmation should check the firm's current Flex plan terms directly before drawing conclusions about their own account.
The takeaway is narrow. If the reported figures hold, Flex traders on the $25K and $50K tiers face materially lower single-cycle withdrawal ceilings than before, which affects cash-flow planning more than total earning potential given MyFundedFutures has no stated time limit on accounts. The episode is also a reminder that per-cycle caps, not splits alone, often determine how quickly a funded trader can compound payouts.