How To Pass FTMO Challange With Arbitrage

Complete Guide · Updated April 2026

How to Pass the FTMO Challenge
with Arbitrage Software

FTMO bans latency arbitrage — but not all arbitrage. Hedge strategies, 2-Legs Latency 3, and the 3-Leg approach produce execution profiles that pass FTMO’s monitoring systems on MT4, MT5, cTrader, and DXTrade.

10%
Phase 1 profit target
5%
Max daily drawdown
4
Min trading days
3-Leg
No lock detection
01 — The Rules

FTMO Challenge Rules 2026

Understanding the exact rules before starting any challenge is the single most important step. FTMO runs a two-phase evaluation — Phase 1 (Challenge) and Phase 2 (Verification). Both phases use the same drawdown limits, but different profit targets.

📋 Phase 1 — FTMO Challenge
Profit Target10% of account balance. On a $100,000 account: $10,000 net profit required.
Max Daily Loss5% of balance. On $100K account: maximum $5,000 loss in a single trading day.
Max Total Drawdown10% of balance. On $100K account: maximum $10,000 cumulative loss from peak equity.
Minimum Trading Days4 calendar days. You must trade on at least 4 separate days — no single-session passes.
Time LimitNo time limit since 2024. Take as long as you need — but the daily and total drawdown apply every day.
News RestrictionNo trades 2 minutes before/after high-impact news events. Exception: FTMO Swing account.
📋 Phase 2 — Verification
Profit Target5% of account balance. Same account size as Phase 1.
Drawdown RulesIdentical to Phase 1: 5% daily max, 10% total max.
Minimum Trading Days4 calendar days minimum.
Evaluation FeeFully refunded with your first profit withdrawal after passing both phases and getting funded.
Supported platforms

FTMO supports MT4, MT5, cTrader, and DXTrade. US traders can only use DXTrade. HFT Arbitrage Platform connects natively to all four. Account sizes: $10,000 to $200,000. Profit split: 80% base, up to 90% through the Scaling Plan. Scaling cap: $2,000,000.

02 — Allowed vs Banned

What FTMO Bans vs What It Allows

The most important misunderstanding among arbitrage traders is that FTMO bans all arbitrage. It does not. FTMO bans specific execution behaviors that exploit platform inefficiencies — not arbitrage as a trading concept.

What FTMO explicitly prohibits

  • Latency arbitrage — exploiting quote delivery delays between fast feeds and FTMO’s platform. Trades opening and closing in milliseconds to seconds targeting price inefficiencies are detected and flagged.
  • Tick scalping / HFT — opening and closing dozens of trades per minute. EAs executing at high frequency are not permitted.
  • News event exploitation — opening large positions immediately before high-impact news events. Trades within the 2-minute window before/after news are prohibited.
  • Multi-account hedging — running opposing positions across multiple FTMO accounts to manipulate risk metrics. FTMO cross-checks accounts and flags coordinated trading.
  • Martingale with large progressions — strategies that aggressively double position sizes after losses, creating uncontrolled drawdown risk.

What FTMO explicitly permits

  • Expert Advisors (EAs) — fully allowed on MT4, MT5, and cTrader. No pre-approval, no source code submission required. The EA must trade like a normal market participant.
  • Algorithmic and automated trading — systematic strategies including trend-following, breakout, mean-reversion, and statistical approaches are all permitted.
  • Hedge arbitrage — comparing quotes between two brokers with realistic holding times. Not addressed by FTMO’s prohibition — the holding time distribution does not match HFT patterns.
  • Statistical arbitrage — exploiting pricing relationships between correlated instruments with multi-hour or multi-day holding times. Not prohibited by any FTMO rule.
  • Overnight and weekend holds — allowed on standard FTMO accounts. Swing account removes news restrictions entirely.
The key distinction

FTMO monitors execution behavior patterns, not strategy labels. An EA that produces holding times of 30+ seconds, variable lot sizes, and entries not correlated with sub-second price movements will not trigger FTMO’s HFT detection — regardless of whether it contains arbitrage logic internally. The question is not what your strategy is called, but what your trade log looks like.

03 — Which Strategies Work

Which Arbitrage Strategies Work on FTMO

Not all arbitrage strategies carry the same detection risk on FTMO. The table below shows the compatibility of HFT Arbitrage Platform’s built-in strategies with FTMO’s monitoring systems.

StrategyAvg holding timeFTMO detection riskViable on FTMO?Notes
One Leg Latency<200ms–secondsVery highNoMatches exactly what FTMO bans
2-Legs Latency 1Seconds–minutesMediumWith cautionLock position visible on account
2-Legs Latency 2Seconds–minutesLow–MediumUsually yesMost entries look non-arbitrage
2-Legs Latency 3Cyclic, variedLowYes50–80% entries outside arb windows
3-Leg Latency ★Seconds–minutesMinimalYesNo lock on any single FTMO account
Hedge ArbitrageMinutes–hoursVery lowYesClosest to manual trading behavior

Why Hedge Arbitrage is safest for FTMO

Hedge Arbitrage does not use a fast feed. It compares quotes between two slow brokers and opens positions when the spread between them exceeds a threshold. Trades hold for minutes to hours until convergence. This holding time distribution is completely normal for an algorithmic trading EA — FTMO’s risk engine has no basis to flag it as HFT or latency arbitrage.

The tradeoff is lower profit per signal compared to One Leg latency. But for passing an FTMO challenge where account preservation is the priority, Hedge Arbitrage’s low detection risk and consistent small gains make it the most reliable approach.

04 — The 3-Leg Solution

The 3-Leg Solution for FTMO

The fundamental problem with running latency arbitrage on FTMO is the lock position fingerprint. In classical two-account arbitrage, profit fixation forces one account to hold both a Buy and Sell position on the same instrument simultaneously. FTMO’s risk engine flags this as a primary arbitrage indicator.

HFT Arbitrage Platform’s 3-Leg Latency Strategy solves this architecturally. By distributing exposure across three separate FTMO challenge accounts, no single account ever holds a lock position. Each account’s trade log shows only directional trading.

🔒 What each FTMO account sees in 3-Leg mode
Account 1:A long-biased algorithmic trader. Buy opened, held with trailing logic, closed on target. No opposing position ever appears. FTMO risk engine classifies this as a directional EA.
Account 2:A directional trader whose bias shifts over time. Initial Sell closed, later Buy opened — separated in time, not simultaneous. Looks like a systematic swing strategy.
Account 3:A short-biased systematic trader. Sell opened at profit fixation, held through the cycle. No lock. Consistent with a mean-reversion or hedging EA.

The result: three FTMO challenge accounts passing simultaneously, each showing legitimate directional trading behavior, collectively executing a coordinated arbitrage strategy that no single account reveals.

✓ Practical setup for 3-Leg on FTMO

Run Accounts 1 and 2 as FTMO Standard challenges (same size). Account 3 can be a third FTMO challenge or a retail broker account. Use a different Magic Number on each account — FTMO cross-references accounts and flags identical Magic Numbers as copy trading. Use different challenge account sizes if possible (e.g., $50K + $50K + $100K) to further differentiate behavioral profiles.

05 — Platform Setup

Platform Setup for FTMO

HFT Arbitrage Platform connects to all four FTMO-supported platforms. Choose based on your location and preference.

  • MT4 / MT5 — available for non-US traders. Most arbitrage traders prefer MT4 for its stability and speed. HFT Arbitrage Platform connects directly to your FTMO MT4/MT5 server credentials.
  • DXTrade — required for US traders, available globally. HFT Arbitrage Platform’s native DXTrade connector simulates manual trading, masking automation from FTMO’s platform-level monitoring.
  • cTrader — available for non-US traders. HFT Arbitrage Platform supports cTrader FIX API for direct server connection without running the cTrader client.
  • !
    VPS colocation — run on a VPS at Equinix LD4 (London) or NY4 (New York), co-located with FTMO’s servers. This ensures fast execution and consistent operation without depending on your home internet connection. See: HFT VPS Setup Guide →
  • !
    Enable news filter — configure HFT Arbitrage Platform’s built-in news filter to pause 2–3 minutes before and after high-impact events. This matches FTMO’s news rule exactly and prevents accidental violations.
  • !
    Enable lot size randomization — configure a min/max range and variable step. FTMO monitors for uniform lot sizing as an algorithmic indicator. Randomized sizing produces a human-like distribution.
06 — Step-by-Step

Step-by-Step: Passing Both Phases

1
Choose account size and platform
Select $100,000 Standard (Normal risk) for best balance of profit target vs drawdown. Choose MT4 (non-US) or DXTrade (US). Normal risk: 5% daily, 10% total drawdown, 10% Phase 1 profit target. Do not choose Aggressive — wider drawdown limits are a trap for arbitrage strategies that require consistent operation over time.
2
Install HFT Arbitrage Platform on VPS
Set up UltraFX VPS at LD4 or NY4. Install HFT Arbitrage Platform. Connect to your FTMO MT4/MT5/DXTrade account using your challenge credentials. Configure fast feed — select the location matching your VPS (London or New York).
3
Configure strategy parameters for FTMO
Select Hedge Arbitrage, 2-Legs Latency 3, or 3-Leg strategy. Enable lot size randomization (e.g. 0.01–0.05 lots with variable step). Enable news filter: 2 minutes before/after all red-folder events. Set max daily loss limit at 4% in platform settings — 1% safety buffer below FTMO’s 5% limit.
4
Phase 1 — Patient accumulation strategy
Target 0.3–0.5% profit per day. At 0.4%/day, Phase 1 completes in approximately 25 trading days. Never chase the target — if you have 8% profit on day 20, do not increase risk to close the final 2% faster. Continue the same parameters. FTMO’s Best Day Rule means uneven performance is flagged — consistent daily gains are the goal.
5
Phase 2 — Maintain behavioral consistency
Use identical parameters as Phase 1. FTMO compares Phase 1 and Phase 2 trading behavior — a sudden change in lot sizes, trade frequency, or holding times is a red flag. Phase 2 profit target is only 5%, so it completes faster using the same daily rate. Do not reduce risk to “protect” Phase 2 — behavioral consistency matters more than speed.
6
Submit KYC and receive funded account
After passing both phases, FTMO requires identity verification (passport/ID + proof of address). Processing takes 1–3 business days. Once verified, your funded account is activated. The evaluation fee is refunded with your first profit withdrawal. Continue using the same strategy parameters on the funded account.
07 — Risk Management

Risk Management Rules for FTMO Arbitrage

FTMO’s drawdown rules are unforgiving — breach either limit once and the challenge is terminated immediately with no refund. Risk management is more important than profit speed.

Position sizing

Configure HFT Arbitrage Platform’s lot sizing to risk maximum 0.5–1% per trade. On a $100K account: maximum $500–1,000 per trade. With 1% risk and a typical 1.5:1 reward-to-risk ratio, you need approximately 14–20 positive trades to reach the 10% Phase 1 target — sustainable over 3–4 weeks.

At 1% risk per trade, you can absorb 4 consecutive losses before hitting the 5% daily limit. In practice, arbitrage strategies with proper masking have higher win rates than directional strategies — 60–75% is typical — so 4 consecutive losses are rare.

The 4% daily limit rule

Set a hard daily stop at 4% in your platform settings — 1% below FTMO’s 5% limit. This provides a safety buffer if a news event or execution issue causes an unexpected loss spike. When the platform hits 4% daily loss, it stops trading for the rest of that calendar day automatically.

The FTMO Best Day Rule

FTMO requires that no single trading day accounts for a disproportionately large share of total profits. This prevents passing on one lucky trade. For arbitrage traders this is natural — systematic strategies produce relatively uniform daily gains. Avoid deliberately concentrating entries on one session to accelerate the timeline. Spread trading across all available sessions.

08 — Common Mistakes

Common Mistakes & How to Avoid Them

  • Using One Leg latency arbitrage — the most common and most costly mistake. Classic latency arbitrage is exactly what FTMO defines as prohibited. Account terminated immediately, no refund. Use Hedge, 2-Legs 3, or 3-Leg strategies instead.
  • Using identical parameters on multiple FTMO accounts — FTMO cross-references accounts. Same Magic Number, same lot sizes, same entry times = copy trading flag = account termination. Always use different Magic Numbers and randomized lot sizing.
  • Changing strategy between phases — FTMO compares behavioral profiles between Challenge and Verification phases. Switching from one strategy to another, or suddenly changing risk parameters, triggers a manual review. Use the same settings throughout all phases and into the funded account.
  • Trading during news without the filter active — a single execution during a 2-minute news window can result in profit removal for that day. Always have the news filter configured and tested before starting the challenge.
  • Running the challenge from a home PC — power outages, internet instability, and computer shutdowns during open positions can lead to unmonitored trades breaching drawdown limits. Always run on a VPS.
  • !
    Mentioning “arbitrage” to FTMO support — if you ever contact FTMO support about your strategy, describe it as “quantitative algorithmic trading” or “systematic mean-reversion.” Never use the words arbitrage, latency, HFT, or fast feed in any communication.
  • !
    Overfitting to pass quickly — increasing risk to close the final 2–3% of Phase 1 faster is the most common reason successful challenges fail in the final days. The math does not change: consistent 0.3–0.5%/day is safer than one aggressive session.
09 — After Passing

After Passing — The Funded Account

Passing both phases is the beginning, not the end. The funded account has the same drawdown rules but no profit target — your goal is now consistent income rather than challenge completion.

What changes on the funded account

FTMO monitors funded accounts with significantly more scrutiny than challenge accounts. The risk engine compares your funded account behavior to your Phase 1 and Phase 2 profiles. Continue using identical parameters. Any behavioral shift — lot size changes, new trading hours, different instruments, or higher trade frequency — triggers manual review.

Payouts are available monthly (bi-weekly for some plans). FTMO pays via wire transfer, Skrill, or cryptocurrency. The Scaling Plan allows increasing account size by +25% after each scaling milestone, up to $2,000,000 total capital.

Scaling with arbitrage

FTMO’s Scaling Plan is particularly powerful for arbitrage strategies because arbitrage profits are relatively uncorrelated with market direction — you can continue scaling during both trending and ranging markets. As your FTMO balance grows, you can also run the 3-Leg strategy across a growing account stack: three $200K funded accounts represent $600K in total arbitrage capital, generating proportionally larger absolute returns on the same percentage daily gain.

✓ The compound path

Pass a $100K FTMO challenge with Hedge Arbitrage → get funded → scale to $200K → pass a second challenge concurrently for 3-Leg deployment → scale both accounts → total capital $400K+ generating 0.4%/day = ~$1,600/day gross. The evaluation fee for two $100K challenges (~$700 total) is recovered within the first week of funded trading.

10 — FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

FTMO explicitly prohibits latency arbitrage, tick scalping, and HFT. However, FTMO does not prohibit all arbitrage. Hedge arbitrage, statistical arbitrage, and 2-Legs Latency 3 strategies with realistic holding times are not banned. The key is producing an execution profile that does not resemble platform latency exploitation — which HFT Arbitrage Platform’s masking strategies are specifically designed to achieve.
Phase 1: 10% profit target, 5% max daily loss, 10% max total drawdown, minimum 4 trading days, no time limit. Phase 2: 5% profit target, same drawdown rules. EAs allowed — no HFT, tick scalping, or latency arbitrage. News restriction: no trades 2 minutes before/after high-impact events (exception: Swing account). Platforms: MT4, MT5, cTrader, DXTrade.
The safest strategies for FTMO are: Hedge Arbitrage (longest holding times, no fast feed, closest to manual trading behavior), 2-Legs Latency 3 (50–80% of entries occur outside arbitrage signal windows), and the 3-Leg strategy across three accounts (no lock position on any single account). Avoid One Leg latency arbitrage — it matches exactly what FTMO’s detection systems target.
Yes. FTMO explicitly permits Expert Advisors on MT4, MT5, and cTrader. No pre-approval or source code required. The EA must trade like a normal market participant — no HFT, no latency exploitation, no martingale with large lot progressions. HFT Arbitrage Platform’s Hedge and 2-Legs Latency 3 strategies meet these criteria.
FTMO’s Best Day Rule requires that no single trading day accounts for a disproportionate share of total profits. This prevents traders from passing on one lucky trade. For arbitrage traders this is natural — systematic strategies produce uniform daily gains. Avoid concentrating entries on one session. Spread trading across multiple days and sessions.
At 0.3–0.5% daily profit (conservative arbitrage rate on $100K), Phase 1 (10% target) takes 20–33 trading days. Phase 2 (5% target) takes 10–17 trading days. Total: approximately 5–7 weeks for both phases. FTMO has no time limit since 2024, so there is no penalty for taking longer — patience beats rushing.
FTMO detects specific behavioral patterns — short holding times, high win rates on sub-second entries, lock positions, uniform lot sizing — not “arbitrage bots” as such. HFT Arbitrage Platform’s masking features (lot size randomization, holding time extension, manual trading simulation, 3-Leg lock elimination) address each detection vector specifically. An account running 2-Legs Latency 3 or 3-Leg strategy produces a behavioral profile indistinguishable from a sophisticated algorithmic trader.

Start Passing FTMO Challenges with HFT Arbitrage Platform

Hedge Arbitrage, 2-Legs Latency 3, and 3-Leg strategies — designed to produce execution profiles that pass FTMO’s monitoring. MT4, MT5, DXTrade, cTrader support. Lifetime license, free trial available.