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Multi-Account Trading on Maven Trading — Rules & Compatibility

Multi-account trading is viable on Maven Trading with proper planning. While the firm doesn't explicitly restrict account stacking, you'll need to carefully manage the 20% consistency requirement across accounts and coordinate risk management with the 3% daily loss limit.

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Rule Compatibility Checklist
Daily Loss Limit (3%)
Calculated per account individually, giving flexibility across multiple accounts
Total Loss Limit (5%)
Monitor carefully across all accounts to prevent cascade failures
Consistency Rule (20%)
Becomes complex with multiple accounts; track daily profit distribution carefully
Weekend Holding
Must close all positions across all accounts before weekend
Forex Only Trading
Simplifies multi-account management by focusing on single asset class
No Copy Trading
Doesn't affect independent multi-account strategies
No EA/Bots
Manual trading requirement is manageable across multiple accounts
Position Sizing Tip

Maintain 1% risk per trade per account regardless of how many accounts you manage. On a $100k account, this means $1,000 risk per trade, scaled proportionally for smaller account sizes.

The biggest mistake traders make when scaling multiple Maven Trading accounts is underestimating how the 20% consistency rule compounds across portfolios. Many assume they can simply replicate their single-account strategy across multiple challenges, only to discover that maintaining consistent performance becomes exponentially harder as they juggle more accounts. Maven Trading operates under standard prop firm conditions that make multi-account trading manageable, though not without challenges. The firm requires a 20% consistency score for both Instant and Mini account types, meaning your daily profit distribution must remain relatively balanced rather than having massive winning days followed by break-even periods. This consistency requirement becomes your primary concern when managing multiple accounts simultaneously. Your daily loss limit sits at 3% of your highest end-of-day balance or current equity, whichever is lower. This means if you're running five accounts with $100,000 each, you're looking at a maximum daily loss of $3,000 per account, or $15,000 total. The key insight here is that Maven calculates this limit individually per account, not across your entire portfolio. This gives you flexibility in position sizing but requires disciplined risk management to prevent cascade failures where one bad day destroys multiple accounts. The 8% profit target in Phase 1 creates an interesting dynamic for multi-account traders. Rather than pushing individual accounts aggressively, you can distribute risk across your portfolio and aim for steady progress on each account. This approach naturally supports the consistency requirement while building a sustainable scaling strategy. Maven's forex-only instrument selection actually simplifies multi-account management. You're not juggling different market sessions for indices or commodities across accounts. With 1:75 leverage on forex pairs, you have sufficient buying power without excessive risk. This leverage level forces you to focus on proper position sizing rather than relying on high leverage to amplify small moves. The absence of minimum trading days removes pressure to force trades across all accounts simultaneously. You can be selective about which accounts you trade on any given day based on market conditions and your consistency metrics. If one account is approaching its daily profit target and you're concerned about the consistency score, you can focus activity on other accounts. Weekend holding restrictions require you to close all positions before market close on Friday. When managing multiple accounts, this means potentially closing dozens of positions simultaneously. Plan your trade management accordingly, especially for longer-term setups that might conflict with weekend restrictions. Your biggest operational challenge will be platform management. Maven offers MT5 and Match Trader, but running multiple accounts means multiple platform instances or careful account switching. Consider dedicating specific trading sessions to specific accounts rather than trying to monitor everything simultaneously. Position sizing across multiple accounts requires mathematical precision. If you typically risk 1% per trade on a single account, maintain that same percentage per account rather than reducing it because you have multiple accounts. Each account should be treated as an independent trading entity for risk management purposes. The 5% total loss limit means you need early warning systems in place. With multiple accounts, it's easy to lose track of cumulative losses during volatile market conditions. Set alerts at 2-3% drawdown per account to give yourself time to reassess before hitting the maximum. Consistency rule compliance becomes more complex with multiple accounts. Track your daily profit distribution across all accounts, not just individual ones. If Account A makes 2% while Accounts B and C break even, your overall consistency score suffers even if individual account metrics look acceptable. Platform-wise, consider using MT5's multi-account manager features if available, or maintain detailed spreadsheets tracking each account's performance metrics. The 4.3/5 Trustpilot rating suggests stable platform performance, but always have contingency plans for technical issues affecting multiple accounts. Your scaling strategy should focus on proven consistency before adding accounts. Successfully managing two accounts with strong consistency scores is more valuable than struggling with five accounts that barely meet requirements. Maven's standard payout structure of 80% makes this conservative approach profitable once you achieve consistency. Remember that correlation risk increases with multiple accounts trading similar strategies. Consider diversifying your approach across accounts or trading different currency pairs to reduce portfolio correlation. The consistency requirement actually supports this diversification approach by rewarding steady, balanced performance over home-run trades.
Works Well For This Strategy
No minimum trading days requirement allows flexible account management
Standard 80% profit split makes scaling profitable
Clear daily and total loss limits simplify multi-account risk management
Frequently Asked Questions

Multi-Account Trading on Maven Trading — FAQ

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Last verified: 1 April 2026. Always confirm current policies directly with Maven Trading before purchasing a challenge.