
Trader @Ckhangg_7 Documents $11,300 in Nine Topstep Payouts
On April 3, X user @Ckhangg_7 posted a milestone update tagging Topstep, reporting nine separate payouts totaling $11,300 drawn from two funded accounts, four from one and five from the other.
The post, published on X and tagged @Topstep, frames the $11,300 as a cumulative total rather than a single withdrawal. The trader specifies the distribution clearly: four payouts from one account and five from a second, both described as still active. A milestone image accompanies the post, and the language emphasizes repetition, the trader writing that the accounts kept printing after an earlier stretch of struggling to keep them alive.
Topstep, founded in Chicago in 2012, routes traders into CME Group futures through its Combine evaluation, which the firm offers without a time limit. The firm currently advertises a 90/10 profit split, though it reports that accounts opened before January 2026 retain 100% of the first $10,000 in profits, a grandfathered term that can shape how early payouts compound. Topstep also caps individual payout requests, with $6,000 per request on standard plans according to the firm, which is consistent with a trader accumulating a total of $11,300 across multiple requests rather than a single transfer.

“From struggling to keep accounts alive to getting paid, again and again.”— @Ckhangg_7 on X
The proof establishes a pattern of repeated withdrawals tied to a tagged Topstep account, but it does not disclose the account size used, the instruments traded, or the strategy behind the results. The post mentions following rules and respecting small P&L, language consistent with discipline-focused trading, yet no contract, tick, or session detail appears in the source. Readers evaluating the screenshot should treat it as documentation of payout volume and consistency, not as evidence of a specific edge or product.
What the post does support is straightforward: a public, dated, platform-tagged claim of nine payouts from two funded accounts at a single firm. For a trader audience accustomed to one-off screenshots, the value here is the cadence, repeat distributions from the same accounts over time, which is harder to fabricate than a single number.