- 7/9/2026
Most forex robots come with bold marketing claims and not much else to back them up. So when one of our VIP members came to us with almost five months of profitable live results using the Aussie Victor MT5 EA, I was genuinely interested. Not because I expected it to be perfect, but because it is rare to get real, trackable performance data from someone actually risking their own capital.
This Aussie Victor MT5 review is a bit different from what you might find elsewhere. I am not going to rehash the vendor’s description or repackage marketing copy. Instead, I will walk you through what we actually found: live results from a VIP member, our own backtest data, demo performance, the settings we chose, and why we decided to run this expert advisor at lower risk. All of it grounded in real numbers, not speculation.
Worth noting: the EA is priced at just €148, which honestly surprised me. For a system with this kind of track record and this level of flexibility in its settings, that is very affordable compared to what most trading robots on the market charge.
Quick verdict: Aussie Victor MT5 is a low-cost MetaTrader 5 expert advisor for AUD/CAD that uses a grid-style strategy with machine-learning-based entry signals. In our testing, 0.01 fixed lots on a $1,000 account produced about 2.8% monthly in backtests and demo trading, while a VIP member using 0.02 lots reported approximately 4% monthly over nearly five months. The main risk is that it is still a grid system, so conservative lot sizing matters.
Let me break it all down.
What Is Aussie Victor MT5?
Aussie Victor is an expert advisor built for the MetaTrader 5 platform. There is no MetaTrader 4 version available, at least not at the time of writing. It trades a single currency pair: AUD/CAD, which the name more or less gives away (the “Aussie” part refers to the Australian dollar).
According to the vendor, Aussie Victor revolutionizes traditional grid trading by combining intelligent positioning with machine-learning-powered entry signals. The system is specifically engineered for the AUD/CAD pair’s unique price dynamics.
I will be honest: the vendor’s website does not provide a huge amount of information beyond that. The description is fairly short, and there is not a ton of detail about the underlying strategy or the logic behind the automated signals. That is not unusual for forex robots in this price range, but it does mean you are relying more heavily on real-world results and your own testing to form an opinion.
For us at Algo Trading Space, that is fine. We always backtest, demo trade, and where possible, rely on live track records before forming a view.
How the Trading Strategy Works
At its core, the Aussie Victor robot is a grid-based system. If you are not familiar, grid trading involves placing buy and sell orders at predefined intervals around a set price, essentially creating a “grid” of positions. The idea is to profit from natural market fluctuations within a range.
What makes this EA a bit different, at least on paper, is the machine-learning layer on top of the grid logic. The entry signals are not purely mechanical in the traditional sense; there is an element of pattern recognition and automated analysis guiding when the system opens positions.
That said, I want to be careful here. I cannot verify exactly how sophisticated the machine-learning component is, and the vendor does not go into detail about the trading indicator logic. What I can tell you is how it performed in practice, both in backtesting and in live trading, and those numbers are more useful than any marketing claim.
One important note: because this is a grid system, it can hold multiple positions open at the same time. That is something to keep in mind from a risk management perspective, and it is one of the reasons we chose to run it at lower risk settings.
VIP Member Live Results
This is where it gets interesting. One of our VIP Club members, Pitt, has been trading the Aussie Victor AUD/CAD EA on a live account since December. We are now almost in May, so that gives us roughly five months of real performance data.
Pitt shares his results through the Space Tracker app, our in-house tool built to track and analyze trading accounts. You can actually view his track record on the Algo Trading Space website under the VIP Club Portfolio.
Here is what stood out to me:
- The equity line is very smooth. I mean, noticeably smooth for a forex robot.
- Drawdowns have been minimal. The biggest dip took the account from about $1,048 down to $1,000, which is really nothing to worry about.
- The account is currently generating approximately 4% per month.
- Total return since he started: 23.5%.


Those are solid performance metrics by any reasonable standard. Not eye-popping, not “quit your job” numbers, but exactly the kind of steady, managed drawdowns and consistent growth that I look for in an EA I would actually trust with real capital.
Pitt trades with a fixed lot size of 0.02 on a live account with BlackBull Markets. That is double what we decided to use, which I will explain shortly.
If you want to see live results from accounts like Pitt’s, along with early reviews and priority support, our VIP Club gives you that kind of exclusive access.
Our Backtest Findings
We never rely solely on someone else’s results, even when they come from a trusted VIP member. We always run our own backtests, and Sam (who handles most of our backtesting work) put together a detailed spreadsheet for the Aussie Victor backtest.

Here is what we found:
- Test period: Just over four years (approximately 48 months)
- Account size: $10,000 for the initial backtest, then translated to a $1,000 account
- Lot size: 0.01 (fixed)
- Total trades: Approximately 800
- Net profit: $1,347 on the $1,000 account (the account more than doubled)
- Maximum drawdown: $353

The equity line from the backtest looked very similar to what we see in Pitt’s live account: smooth, with a few minor dips that are barely noticeable relative to the overall growth. That consistency across both live and historical data is encouraging, though of course past performance never guarantees future results.
We plugged the Aussie Victor drawdown figure into our standard allowable drawdown calculation. On our live accounts, we set a maximum drawdown threshold of 50%. With a worst-case drawdown of $353 on a $1,000 starting balance, that sits comfortably within our limits, even if it happened on day one.

The expected monthly return from the backtest came in at 2.8%. For us, anything between 2% and 3% per month is right where we want to be. It is not flashy, but it is sustainable. And in this business, sustainable matters a lot more than spectacular.

Demo Account Performance
Before going live, we ran the Aussie Victor MT5 EA on a free demo account for about a month. Call it a final sanity check.
After 31 days of demo trading, the account gained exactly 2.8%. That is almost a perfect match with the backtest projection, and it lines up with what Pitt’s live account shows (adjusted for the fact that he runs higher risk with 0.02 lots).
I will admit, seeing the demo numbers land so close to the backtest was reassuring. It does not always happen that way. Sometimes there is slippage between historical data and real-time execution, or spread differences throw things off. In this case, the demo results tracked almost perfectly.
Our Live Account and Settings
We recently started a live account with Aussie Victor on a VPS (virtual private server). The account is brand new; literally about a day old at the time we recorded our review. So there is not a long track record to show just yet.
What I can tell you is that in its first day, the account already had three profitable trades and one open sell position, which matched what we saw on Pitt’s account at the same time.
We are using BlackBull Markets as our broker (more on that below), and the EA is attached directly to the AUD/CAD chart on the VPS.
I think it is worth being transparent here: we cannot make any firm claims about our live account’s performance yet. It is too early. But the early signals are consistent with what the backtest and demo suggested, so we are cautiously optimistic.
Aussie Victor comes with quite a few configurable settings. I am not going to list every single one, but there are a few that matter a lot.
Our Aussie Victor MT5 settings:
- Platform: MetaTrader 5
- Pair: AUD/CAD
- Broker: BlackBull Markets
- VPS: Yes
- Risk mode: Fixed lot
- Lot size: 0.01 per $1,000 account
- Stop loss: Disabled in our backtest and live setup
- Target return: 2% to 3% per month
- Prop firm use: Not used by us; check firm rules before running any grid EA
Risk Model and Lot Sizing
The EA offers two main risk modes. Fixed lots lets you choose a specific lot size, and every trade opens at that size regardless of account balance. Auto lot is a money management mode where the system adjusts lot size based on your account equity.
We chose fixed lots at 0.01. The reason is simple: based on the backtest, demo, and Pitt’s live results, 0.01 lots on a $1,000 account should deliver that 2% to 3% monthly return we are targeting.
Pitt uses the same fixed lot approach but at 0.02, so he is taking on roughly double the risk. His returns reflect that; around 4% per month. We are comfortable at 0.01 for now. We might increase it in the future if the live results continue to hold up, but there is no rush.

Protection and Stop Loss
The EA includes built-in protection settings. You can enable or disable a stop loss, and you can configure it as either a percentage drawdown or a fixed monetary amount.
In our backtest, we traded without the stop loss and got the results we were looking for. So for now, we have chosen not to use it. That said, I think it is worth knowing the option is there, especially if you are more risk-averse or running a smaller account where capital preservation is a bigger concern.
Prop Firm Compatibility
There are settings at the bottom of the configuration panel specifically designed for prop firm compliance. In theory, you could use this Aussie Victor grid EA on a funded account.
However, I would urge caution here. This is a grid system, and prop firms are becoming stricter about third-party EAs and grid-based strategies. Always check with the specific prop firm before running any automated system on their trading platform.
We are not trading this on a prop firm. We are sticking with live trading on our own funded accounts for the time being.
Broker: BlackBull Markets
Pitt trades with BlackBull Markets, and we chose the same broker for our Aussie Victor live setup. The reasons are straightforward:
- We have been trading with BlackBull for years and have never had issues.
- They are fully regulated and award-winning.
- The spreads are very tight on this platform.
When we checked the AUD/CAD spread during our review, it was sitting at 0.7 pips. For a forex pair that is not one of the “major majors,” that is excellent. Tight spreads matter a lot for any automated trading strategy, but they are particularly important for a grid system where the EA opens multiple positions.

I am not saying BlackBull is the only broker that will work with this EA, but it is the one we have tested it on and the one our VIP member has been using successfully for five months.
Performance Summary
Here is a comparison table pulling together the key performance metrics across our backtest, demo, and VIP member’s live account:
| Metric | Backtest (4+ Years) | Demo (31 Days) | VIP Member Live (~5 Months) |
| Test Period | 4+ years | 31 days | Nearly 5 months |
| Platform | MT5 | MT5 | MT5 |
| Pair | AUD/CAD | AUD/CAD | AUD/CAD |
| Lot Size | 0.01 fixed | 0.01 fixed | 0.02 fixed |
| Starting Capital | $1,000 equivalent | $1,000 | ~$1,000 |
| Monthly Return | ~2.8% | 2.8% | ~4% |
| Total Return | ~134.7% | 2.8% | 23.5% |
| Max Drawdown | $353 | Minimal | ~$48 |
| Broker | Backtest data | BlackBull Markets | BlackBull Markets |
The consistency across all three data sets is probably the most encouraging thing. Backtest, demo, and live results all point in the same direction: steady returns with managed drawdowns.
Risk Analysis: Grid Trading and Drawdown
I want to give this its own section because I think it matters. Aussie Victor MT5 is a grid EA. If AUD/CAD trends sharply against open positions, the EA can accumulate multiple trades. We reduced this risk by using 0.01 fixed lots on a $1,000 account rather than copying the higher-risk 0.02 setup from the VIP member’s account.
The maximum drawdown in our four-year backtest was $353, which is about 35% on a $1,000 balance. That is within our 50% allowable drawdown policy, but it is not trivial either. If you are the type of trader who gets uncomfortable seeing a 20% or 30% dip, you should think carefully about whether a grid-based approach is right for you.
Reducing the risk slightly, as we have done, makes the system much easier to manage over time while still aiming for steady, long-term profitability. You do not need to run it aggressively to get good results. And I think that is maybe the most important takeaway from this entire review.
Past performance, whether from backtests or live accounts, does not guarantee future financial returns. This is a market where conditions change, and there are never guarantees.
Aussie Victor MT5 vs Other Forex Robots
Aussie Victor MT5 is more specialized than multi-pair EAs because it only trades AUD/CAD. That makes it easier to assess, but it also means the system depends heavily on one pair’s price behavior. If AUD/CAD enters a prolonged trending phase that does not suit grid logic, you will feel it.
Compared with aggressive high-return trading robots, Aussie Victor appears more conservative at 0.01 fixed lots, with our target return sitting around 2% to 3% monthly rather than high-risk double-digit returns. Some traders will see that as a limitation; I think of it as a feature.
At €148, it is also significantly cheaper than most competing expert advisors. Many charge several hundred to over a thousand dollars. The low price makes it more accessible if you want to test an EA without a large upfront commitment.
We have reviewed other EAs with similar steady-return profiles on the Algo Trading Space website, so if you are building a list of forex robots to test, it is worth comparing across multiple systems before committing capital.
How We Tested Aussie Victor MT5
For transparency, here is our testing methodology. We assessed the Aussie Victor expert advisor using three data sources: a VIP member’s live account (nearly five months on BlackBull Markets at 0.02 lots), our own four-plus-year backtest (translated to a $1,000 account at 0.01 lots), and a 31-day demo account (also at 0.01 lots on BlackBull Markets).
We compared returns, drawdown, trade frequency, lot sizing, broker conditions, and AUD/CAD execution quality before deciding to run the EA on a live BlackBull Markets account at 0.01 fixed lots per $1,000. All analysis was done using the Space Tracker app, our in-house tool for tracking and reviewing trading account performance.
This review is based on data available as of May 2026.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Aussie Victor MT5 a grid EA?
Yes. The Aussie Victor MT5 expert advisor uses grid-style position management on the AUD/CAD pair. That means it can hold multiple open trades at the same time, which is typical of grid-based strategies. Because of this, lot size and drawdown control are central to managing risk. We chose 0.01 fixed lots on a $1,000 account specifically to keep drawdowns within a comfortable range, even though higher lot sizes would produce larger returns.
What is the best lot size for Aussie Victor MT5?
In our testing, we used 0.01 fixed lots on a $1,000 account. That produced a target range of about 2% to 3% per month in both our backtest and demo trading. Our VIP member uses 0.02 fixed lots on a similar-sized account and sees roughly 4% monthly, but with proportionally higher drawdown risk. Starting at 0.01 and adjusting later based on your own live results is, I think, the more sensible approach.
Does Aussie Victor MT5 work on AUD/CAD only?
Yes. The Aussie Victor robot is designed specifically for the AUD/CAD currency pair. The vendor’s description confirms it was engineered for that pair’s unique price dynamics. I would not assume the same settings work on other pairs unless the vendor provides pair-specific configuration files. Running it on a different pair without testing would be speculative and risky.
Can Aussie Victor MT5 pass a prop firm challenge?
It includes prop firm-related settings in the configuration panel, which is a nice feature. However, we are not using it on a prop firm account ourselves. Because Aussie Victor is a grid EA with potential for multiple open positions, you need to check whether your specific prop firm allows grid strategies and third-party expert advisors. Many firms are tightening their rules around automation, so do not assume it will be accepted.
What broker works best with Aussie Victor MT5?
Our live setup uses BlackBull Markets, and our VIP member Pitt also trades on BlackBull. During our review, AUD/CAD spreads were around 0.7 pips, which is very tight and matters a lot for a grid-based system that opens frequent positions. We have traded with BlackBull for years without issues. That said, other brokers with competitive AUD/CAD spreads and MT5 support could also work; just make sure to test on a demo first.

Ilan


