
@starfxt Pulls Roughly $11,000 From 15 Apex Accounts in One Cycle
Trader @starfxt confirmed on X that a single payout cycle delivered approximately $11,000 from Apex Trader Funding, spread across 15 funded accounts at roughly $750 each, alongside a separate $2,000 withdrawal from another firm.
On June 26, 2026, the trader known as @starfxt posted on X confirming a fresh round of payouts pulled from multiple funded accounts. The headline number for Apex Trader Funding came in at roughly $11,000, distributed across 15 separate accounts at approximately $750 each. A second leg of the same payout cycle added another $2,000 from a competing evaluation firm, after the standard profit split was applied. None of these withdrawals were oversized on any single account, which the trader explicitly framed as a feature rather than a limitation.
The post lays out a deliberate philosophy: scale comes from breadth of accounts and consistent withdrawal rhythm, not from chasing one outsized result. @starfxt argues that traders should not start by stacking 5, 10, 15, or 20 accounts on day one. Instead, the suggested path is to start with one account, secure a payout, cover the operating costs, and then redeploy that payout into funding the next account. The doubling sequence cited in the post reads as 1, 2, 4, 8, with each step funded by realized withdrawals rather than fresh capital from a paycheck.

“Scale with payouts, not with your own money. If an account blows, replace it with payout money, not money from your paycheck.”— @starfxt on X
Risk management gets the final word in the original message. If an account blows, the trader replaces it using payout money rather than personal savings, which keeps the household budget insulated from evaluation losses. Apex Trader Funding has been operating since 2021 and runs a 100 percent on-demand payout model, meaning eligible traders can request withdrawals when their accounts meet the published thresholds rather than waiting for a fixed monthly cycle. That structure is what makes the compounding cadence described in the post mechanically possible across 15 accounts at once.
The breakdown of approximately $750 per account is consistent with conservative withdrawal sizing relative to typical Apex profit targets, leaving cushion in each account for the next cycle. By keeping individual payouts modest and frequent, the trader avoids the binary risk profile that comes with pushing a single account toward a large lump sum. The post closes with a simple framing: keep costs low, scale with payouts rather than personal funds, and that is how a trader stays in the game long enough to win.