
@austinsilverfx Documents $8,500 in May Payouts From Top One Futures
On June 28, X user @austinsilverfx posted that he collected $8,500 in payouts from Top One Futures during May 2025, while running three $50,000 accounts in parallel at the firm. A screenshot accompanied the post.
On Saturday, June 28, the trader @austinsilverfx posted on X that he received $8,500 in payouts from Top One Futures during May. The post was accompanied by a screenshot and framed as context for an additional withdrawal he expected to lock in the following week, drawn from three $50,000 accounts each approaching a $2,500 payout threshold.
The proof on offer is the May figure of $8,500, which the trader presents as already received. The forward looking line about $7,500 the following week is a projection, not a documented receipt, and should be read as such. The screenshot attached to the post is the only visual corroboration; this article treats the $8,500 May total as the verified claim.

“This comes after my $8,500 in payouts in May.”— @austinsilverfx on X, June 28
The trader specifies he is running three $50,000 accounts in parallel at Top One Futures. He does not disclose the specific instrument traded, the strategy used, or the plan type underlying those accounts, so the proof does not establish how the profits were generated or which of the firm's overlapping account models were involved.
Top One Futures, founded in April 2025 according to a single public source, offers sim-funded futures accounts with a 90/10 profit split in the trader's favor and account sizes ranging from $25,000 to $150,000. The firm states it has paid out more than $19 million across 122 countries, a figure that remains firm-stated rather than independently audited. The May payout documented here is consistent with the firm's reported payout activity but does not on its own verify the aggregate.
What the post does establish is straightforward: a public, dated, screenshot-backed claim of $8,500 received in May 2025 from a single firm by a single trader operating multiple mid-size accounts. For readers tracking which newer futures firms are actually moving money to traders, that is a useful, narrow data point, no more and no less.