Overtrading is the most common reason retail F&O traders lose money — not because the market is against them, but because they take too many trades, including low-quality, impulsive trades driven by boredom, FOMO, or the desire to recover losses. A hard cap on daily trades is the most direct way to force quality over quantity.
TradeGuard's Max Trades Per Day rule counts every executed trade in your account. The moment you hit your limit, the kill switch fires: your account locks, no new positions can be opened, and you're done for the day. No exceptions. No override in the heat of the moment.
Your first trade of the day is typically your best-planned trade — you've done your analysis, identified your setup, and entered at the right level. Your tenth trade of the day is often impulsive — you're chasing a move, trying to recover a loss, or trading out of boredom. The quality of your decision-making deteriorates significantly after the first 5–7 trades in a session.
Every F&O trade has entry + exit brokerage, STT, stamp duty, and exchange fees. On Dhan (Upstox & others coming soon), this comes to roughly ₹30–₹60 per side for a typical options contract. If you take 30 trades in a day, you've paid ₹1,800–₹3,600 in transaction costs before your P&L even starts. Most retail traders overtrade enough that brokerage alone accounts for 30–50% of their losses.
After a losing trade, you feel compelled to take another to "get it back." After that losing trade, you feel even more compelled. This revenge trading loop compounds losses exponentially. Capping trades per day breaks this loop structurally: after 8 trades (or whatever you set), the market simply isn't accessible to you any more.
The right number depends on your strategy. Here are typical ranges by strategy type:
Set 4–8 trades per day. Directional buyers need few, high-conviction setups. More than 8–10 trades/day usually means you're chasing moves.
Set 6–12 trades. Sellers often have more positions to manage, but still shouldn't add more than 2–3 new strangles/straddles per day.
Set 10–15 trades max. Even aggressive intraday traders rarely need more than 15 trades to capture the day's moves.
Set a higher limit (20–30) but combine with a strict daily loss limit — the loss limit will fire before the trade counter on bad days.
Max Trades Per Day works best in combination with the daily loss limit. Together they form a complete circuit breaker: whichever threshold you hit first locks the account. On days when you're losing, the loss limit fires before you reach your trade cap. On days when you're overtrading despite profitability, the trade cap kicks in.
You can also combine with profit target lock — once you've captured your target, there's no need to keep trading even if you haven't hit your trade limit.