
@miketoosmoothx Posts $25,000 Tradeify Payout on a $25K Account
Trader @miketoosmoothx posted on X on June 13 that a $25,000 payout from Tradeify had been confirmed, sharing a screenshot of the approval after what the trader described as a deliberate move down to a single $25K account.
On June 13, the trader @miketoosmoothx posted on X that they had received a payout from Tradeify, sharing the news alongside a screenshot of the confirmation. The post frames the result as a discipline experiment after losing prior $150K accounts, with the trader writing that they took a single $25,000 account to rebuild habits. The payout amount visible in the proof is $25,000, with an approval date in June 2026 reflected in the supporting image.
The post itself does not specify which instruments the trader used, the strategy behind the result, or the length of time the account was active before this withdrawal. It also does not clarify whether the $25,000 figure refers to a single withdrawal or cumulative earnings on the account. Readers should treat the screenshot as evidence of a payout event from Tradeify, not as a record of return on capital or win rate.

“Got a single $25k account to discipline myself bc i blew all my 150ks.”— @miketoosmoothx on X
Tradeify, founded in June 2024 and based in Boca Raton, Florida, offers funded futures accounts in sizes of $25K, $50K, $100K, and $150K, with a 90/10 profit split that lets traders keep 100% of the first $15,000 on its Growth and Lightning plans before the standard split kicks in. The firm reports having paid out more than $200 million across its trader base, though that figure is firm-stated rather than independently audited. The trader's choice of the smallest account size aligns with the stated goal of enforcing discipline rather than chasing size.
What the proof establishes is narrow but meaningful: a public, dated post from an identifiable account, a Tradeify-branded confirmation, and a clear dollar figure. What it does not establish is performance context, fee history, or how the payout compares against the trader's prior losses on larger accounts. Taken on its own terms, it adds one more dated data point to the public record of withdrawals from the firm.