
FuturesFarming Requests $20,000 Payout From Tradeify After Profit Day
On Friday, June 26, the trader @FuturesFarming posted on X that he had closed a profit day at Tradeify and would request a $20,000 payout after the session close. The note was part of a longer end-of-week roundup covering several funded firms.
The Tradeify line in the post is short and specific. The trader writes that a profit day was completed and that he is requesting $20,000 after close that day. No account size, plan tier, or instrument is identified in the post, and the screenshot attached to the thread relates to a different firm referenced later in the same message. The $20,000 figure is therefore a stated payout request from the trader, not a settled receipt visible in the proof.
Context from Tradeify itself helps frame the figure. The firm, founded in June 2024 and based in Boca Raton, offers US futures trading on CME, COMEX, NYMEX, and CBOT, with funded account sizes of $25K, $50K, $100K, and $150K. Its profit split is 90/10, with traders keeping 100% of the first $15,000 on the Growth and Lightning plans before the split begins. A $20,000 request would sit comfortably inside that first-window plus split structure on those plans, though the post does not say which plan the trader is on.

“Profit day done on @Tradeify requesting $20,000 after close today.”— @FuturesFarming on X, June 26
What the proof establishes is narrow and worth stating plainly. It documents a public, time-stamped declaration of intent to request a payout, posted by an account that regularly publishes its weekly funded-trading activity. It does not, on its own, confirm approval, processing, or receipt of the $20,000 from Tradeify. Readers looking for a settled-payment certificate will want to wait for a follow-up screenshot from the trader or a confirmation via Tradeify's payout processor.
The broader thread provides useful framing without changing what the Tradeify line proves. The trader reports activity across TakeProfit, Bulenox, TradeDay, E8, and Alpha Futures in the same post, with mixed outcomes including a failed evaluation round and an account lost to overtrading. That candor about losses, alongside the payout request, is the kind of detail that tends to lend credibility to a public trading log, even where individual figures remain unverified at the moment of posting.