Pattern Day Trader Rule: What You Need to Know
The Pattern Day Trader rule limits day trading in margin accounts under $25,000, restricting how often traders can enter and exit positions intraday.
Pattern Day Trader Rule: What You Need to Know
The Pattern Day Trader (PDT) rule is a US regulation that restricts how often small-margin account holders can day trade. It catches many beginners by surprise and can freeze an account mid-trade. Knowing the rule before you start can save you from a costly lesson.
What Counts as a Day Trade?
A day trade is buying and selling (or shorting and covering) the same security on the same trading day. The PDT rule applies when you make 4 or more day trades within 5 business days, and those trades account for more than 6% of your total trading activity in that window.
If both conditions are met, your account is flagged as a pattern day trader.
The $25,000 Minimum
Once flagged, your margin account must maintain a minimum balance of $25,000 to continue day trading.
- Below $25,000 → account is restricted from day trading
- Above $25,000 → unlimited day trades allowed (subject to margin)
If you violate the rule and lack the funds, your broker may issue a margin call or restrict the account for up to 90 days.
How the Rule Applies
| Account Type | PDT Rule Applies? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Margin account | Yes | $25k minimum if flagged |
| Cash account | No | Settlement rules apply instead |
| IRA accounts | No | But no margin trading either |
Common Beginner Mistakes
- Not knowing the rule exists until the account is frozen
- Triggering it accidentally with a few quick round-trips
- Assuming cash accounts are exempt — they face settlement rules instead
- Forgetting the 5-day rolling window — counts accumulate over time
Working Around PDT
If you have less than $25k:
- Trade a cash account — No PDT rule, but wait for settlement (T+1)
- Swing trade — Hold positions overnight or longer
- Grow the account — Save toward the $25k minimum
If you have $25k+, day trade freely but keep a buffer above the minimum and track your day-trade count manually.
The Takeaway
The Pattern Day Trader rule is one of the most common traps for new active traders. Understand it before your first trade, choose the right account type for your capital, and either build toward the $25k minimum or trade in a cash account. The rule isn't a punishment — it's a guardrail designed to keep new traders from blowing up their accounts before they learn the craft.