Bitunix copy trading can help beginners participate in the market without staring at charts all day— but only if you set strict limits. This guide walks you through setup + the safety settings that matter most.
Before you start Basic setup steps The 5 safety settings How to pick lead traders Fees + funding + futures Bonuses & rewards FAQ Related guides
Use these to confirm promos + account setup basics before you copy trade.
Copy trading isn’t “guaranteed profit.” Your job is to survive first: keep allocations small, avoid high leverage, and stop copying if performance breaks down.
If you haven’t picked a trader yet, read: How to Choose a Copy Trader.
For a complete framework, see: Bitunix Risk Management Guide.
If you don’t know what to set yet, choose a rule you can follow without emotions: pause copying if a trader hits your max drawdown, then reassess weekly.
Even if you’re copying a great trader, costs can reduce results—especially if they trade futures. Learn the basics so you know what you’re paying and why.
Bonuses are a perk—not a strategy. Most people get wrecked when they increase size or leverage just to “unlock” rewards.
Is Bitunix copy trading safe for beginners?
It can be safer than manual trading if you use strict allocation limits, avoid high leverage, and stop copying when drawdowns exceed your rule.
How many traders should I copy?
Many beginners start with 1–3 traders. Diversify, but don’t overcomplicate it.
What’s the #1 setting I should use?
Max allocation per trader. It prevents one trader from blowing up your account.
Should I copy martingale traders?
Usually no. Martingale can look great until one streak creates a very large drawdown.