The $25K Rule That's Blocking Millions from Day Trading Is About to Change
Wall Street's top regulator is preparing to slash the minimum account balance required for frequent investing, a move that could open day trading to millions of investors currently shut out by existing rules.
FINRA Weighs Major Changes to Day Trading Rules for Small Investors
The Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) is drafting a proposal that would lower the threshold for pattern day trading from $25,000 to just $2,000. The change would eliminate one of the most complained-about barriers facing retail investors who want to trade stocks and options multiple times per day.
Under current regulations dating back to 2001, investors with less than $25,000 in their brokerage accounts can make only three day trades within a five-business-day period. Cross that line, and they're banned from additional margin trades for 90 days or until they deposit enough cash to reach the $25,000 minimum.
The proposed overhaul would scrap those trading limits entirely. Instead, individual brokerages would set their own minimum balance requirements for day trading customers, though the draft suggests $2,000 as the new floor.
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Timeline Remains Uncertain
According to Bloomberg, a group of retail brokerages recently met to review the draft proposal, which could reach FINRA's board for a vote this fall. If approved there, the rule change would still need final blessing from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), potentially pushing implementation into late 2025 or early 2026.
More than 50 brokerages and individual investors have already submitted comments to FINRA, which opened the door to rule changes last October. A FINRA spokesperson said the regulator has “no update to share at this time” beyond that initial request for input.
On one hand, the rules from a previous era still apply; on the other, exchanges are pushing to introduce 24/7 trading, aligning with modern standards and technological capabilities.
Industry Pushes for Reform

Brokerage firms have been lobbying hard for the changes, arguing that market conditions have evolved dramatically since the rule's inception during the dot-com era. Back then, stock trades often cost $10 or more per transaction, making frequent trading prohibitively expensive for small accounts.
“Today, trading is often commission-free, although not in all securities, and there's less concern about excessive commission cost,” said Haoxiang Zhu, a finance professor at MIT's Sloan School of Management and former SEC official, quoted by Bloomberg.

Anthony Denier, CEO of trading platform Webull Financial, put it more bluntly: “This rule was created at a time when retail investors' access to information, pricing and news was greatly disadvantaged. Times have changed and the rule needs to be changed as well by removing the minimum dollar amount requirement.”
Major brokerages including Robinhood, Fidelity, and Tastytrade have all written to FINRA arguing that improved technology makes it easier to monitor customer risk in real-time. They say automated systems now reject trades when accounts lack sufficient buying power, reducing the chance of catastrophic losses.
Critics Warn of Increased Risk
Not everyone thinks loosening the rules is wise. The original regulations were designed to protect inexperienced traders from borrowing more money than they could afford to lose.
“Day trading on a margin account is risky, and that's why FINRA put this rule in place,” Zhu cautioned.
Recent research supports those concerns. A 2024 Stanford Graduate School of Business study found that "increasing market access will likely impair retail investors' performance". International data is even more sobering - Indian regulators reported this month that 91% of retail investors lose money trading equity derivatives.
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Options Trading Boom Drives Change
The push for rule changes comes as individual investors have embraced options trading with unprecedented enthusiasm. The options market has expanded 23% since last June, with retail traders using these derivatives to make leveraged bets on stock price movements.
Options allow traders to control large positions with relatively small amounts of capital, amplifying both potential gains and losses. The practice has surged alongside broader market volatility and uncertainty over trade policies.
If approved, the rule change would likely trigger a surge in retail trading activity. Lowering the barrier from $25,000 to $2,000 would bring day trading within reach of millions of Americans who currently can't meet the higher threshold.
That prospect worries some market observers who remember the meme-stock frenzy of 2020–2021, when inexperienced traders piled into companies like GameStop and AMC Entertainment, often losing substantial sums. Online brokerages like Robinhood faced criticism for “gamifying” investing during that period.
Whether FINRA's board will approve the proposal remains uncertain. Even if it does, the lengthy regulatory process means any changes are still months away from taking effect.