You build the most confidence when you don’t just look at “does it follow or not,” but when you run consistent checks per trade.
A demo is often the fastest way to see how the master and followers actually behave, especially when multiple accounts or brokers are running simultaneously or when the market moves quickly.
In a demo, you mainly spot recurring differences: what’s off, how often it happens, and whether you still find that acceptable.
At tradesyncer.com, we therefore like tests where you can see exactly what’s happening, so orders and logs immediately point you to what to tweak.
On that note, let’s check out how to spot sync errors between accounts. With my guide, you will figure out the basics of spotting sync errors.
Stay tuned.
How To Spot Sync Errors? A Practical Guide
Knowing how to spot sync errors between different accounts involves checking multiple application dashboards for different status flags.
Moreover, it also includes reviewing all error logs for particular failure messages. Plus, troubleshooting across different platforms can often involve fore-triggering re-sync, removing app caches, or verifying credentials.
On that note, let’s check out three ways in which you can spot sync errors. Also, while going through the different methods, note that this guide is specifically meant for beginners.
1. Start With A Demo That’s Deliberately Boring:
Keep your demo test simple, and you’ll see faster where differences come from: settings, broker execution, or a strategy with lots of exceptions.
What often works well: one master account with one simple strategy, plus two follower accounts copying along, ideally with different brokers.
Keep the order size small, so you’re mainly testing behavior: opening, modifying, and closing, without PnL swings taking over your view.
Also, define up front what “the same” means to you. That way, you use the same yardstick for every trade.
Think: same direction, entry within a pre-chosen price zone, stop loss and take profit included, and the follower opens within a time window that still feels reasonable.
If you lock this in beforehand, every trade becomes a consistent comparison instead of a loose impression.
2. Change Only One Thing Per Test Round:
As soon as you change multiple settings at once, you end up guessing which change caused which effect.
Pick one variable per test round, and you’ll see cause and effect much faster. For example: adjust only the lot size mapping, or only the instrument, or only the order type.
If a difference shows up again after that, it often points straight to the right area: mapping, broker execution, or how the strategy places and modifies orders.
3. Sync Signals You’ll Recognize Quickly In A Demo:
In a demo, it’s less about results and more about patterns in your order list. Watch for signals you can compare per trade and that keep coming back:
- The follower consistently opens or closes later than the master (always a similar delay).
- Stop loss or take profit is missing on the follower while it is present on the master.
- The volume on the follower differs from what your mapping would suggest (for example, due to rounding or minimum order size).
- An order is still open on one account, while the same trade is already closed on the other accounts.
- Slippage differs per broker in a consistently similar way.
Don’t look only at the chart. The order list is usually the fastest: line by line, you can see whether the same actions actually went through.
If something stands out, order lines and timestamps give you something solid to trace back exactly what happened.
Where It Tends To Go Wrong? Mapping, Instruments, And Order Types
A lot of differences become obvious if you always include a few practical checks.
Mapping, rounding, and minimum order size are often the first things you’ll notice. A ratio can look logical, but if a broker enforces a minimum or rounds differently, the volume can still end up off.
How do you recognize it? You keep seeing small volume changes that don’t match your mapping. What helps: test with smaller increments and align your mapping with the step size you actually see in practice.
With instruments, you’ll quickly see whether symbols don’t match one-to-one.
The same instrument can have a different name per broker. How you recognize it: the master trades instrument X, but the follower opens something with a different symbol name, or stays silent. What helps: check per account which symbol is actually used and adjust your selection accordingly.
With order types, you often see differences between market, limit, and stop. In a fast market, a limit on the follower can play out differently than on the master.
How do you recognize it? The master has a position, while the follower has a pending order or no fill.
What helps: test the same scenario with a different order type, or temporarily use a strategy that relies less on exact fills.
Keep in mind that copying doesn’t automatically produce identical results. Execution differs per broker and per moment.
If you want to get closer to “identical,” it often helps if your setup has less variation to deal with (for example, fewer brokers) or if your strategy is less sensitive to timing and fill differences.
Only Make Your Demo Real If Intervening Is Simple:
A demo only becomes useful if you already know what you’ll do when something weird shows up.
That keeps things calm because you don’t have to improvise in the middle of a deviation.
For example, define three things: when copying pauses, which limits are active, and where you can see what happened.
Decide when you’ll pause temporarily (such as when stops are missing or volumes don’t match your mapping), what boundaries apply for maximum position size and the number of open trades, and how logging or order history quickly shows which step went wrong.
If you mainly want speed, tighter limits and automatic pauses often give you control faster.
If you want maximum control, a phased rollout feels better: first get one follower stable, and only then expand.
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