I Used Only Trading Bots for 30 Days — Was It Profitable?
Trading bots are everywhere these days. From flashy YouTube thumbnails promising “100% passive income” to Telegram groups selling the “ultimate bot setup,” automation is the new buzzword in crypto trading. But does it actually work? Can a trading bot consistently make money without your constant supervision?
I decided to find out. For 30 days straight, I used only trading bots to trade crypto — no manual trades, no human intervention, just automation. Here’s my honest experience, the setups I used, the results (good and bad), and whether I’d recommend it to anyone thinking about going fully automated.
Why I Decided to Go 100% Bot Trading
The main reason? Time. Like many traders, I juggle work and other responsibilities, and sitting in front of charts all day isn’t realistic. Bots promise the dream: you set them up, they trade for you, and you make money while you sleep.
But there’s always skepticism. If bots worked perfectly, wouldn’t everyone be rich by now? So I decided to test it myself under real market conditions, with real money on the line.
The Rules of My Experiment
Duration: 30 days (one full month).Capital: $3,000 split across three bots.Exchanges: Binance and Bybit.Strategy: No manual intervention — once the bots were configured, I left them to do their thing.Goal: To see if I could make a profit without lifting a finger.
The Bots I Chose
There are hundreds of bots out there, but I narrowed it down to three types most traders use:
Grid Bot — Works best in sideways markets by buying low and selling high in a defined range.DCA (Dollar-Cost Averaging) Bot — Buys dips and reduces entry price over time.Futures Bot — Trades with leverage based on signals, aiming to capture short-term trends.
I wanted a mix of conservative, moderate, and aggressive bots to see which one would hold up best in different market conditions.
Week 1: The Honeymoon Phase
The first week was exciting. The market was relatively calm, and my Grid Bot on Binance was printing small, consistent profits on ETH/USDT. I set it to operate between $1,750 and $1,950 with 50 grids. Every time the price oscillated within that range, it would buy and sell automatically.
By the end of the first week:
Grid Bot: +$47 profitDCA Bot: Barely moved, only placed a couple of small buys.Futures Bot: Up $82 from a few lucky trades during a minor BTC pump.
Total after Week 1: + $129. I was feeling pretty good. Bots seemed like the holy grail — set and forget, money comes in. Or so I thought.
Week 2: Reality Check
The second week slapped me with the harsh truth: bots don’t care about market news or trend reversals — they just follow their code.
Bitcoin broke out of a tight range and ripped higher, blowing past the range I set for the Grid Bot. Suddenly, it stopped trading because price left its zone. Meanwhile, the DCA bot started buying aggressively during a dip on SOL — but the dip kept dipping.
The biggest pain came from the Futures Bot. I had set it to run on a signal-based long/short strategy with 3x leverage. When BTC faked a breakout and reversed, the bot got trapped in a long position. Liquidation wasn’t far. I manually resisted the urge to close the trade (rules are rules), but I watched unrealized losses stack up.
By the end of Week 2:
Grid Bot: +$55 (slowed down after price moved out of range).DCA Bot: Down -$112 (bagholding SOL at a high average price).Futures Bot: Down -$248 (ouch).
Total after Week 2: — $305. Half my Week 1 gains were gone — plus some.
Week 3: The Emotional Test
Week 3 tested my patience. The Futures Bot was still stuck in a losing trade, while the DCA Bot kept adding positions as the market dipped further. I started questioning everything: Should I step in? Should I cut losses? But I stuck to the plan.
The Grid Bot was practically useless now because ETH had trended higher, out of its range. To fix this, I stopped the bot and reset it at a new range (slightly breaking my “no interference” rule, but it had to be done).
By the end of Week 3:
Grid Bot: +$92 (after resetting, it started making small gains again).DCA Bot: Down -$165 (bags getting heavier).Futures Bot: Down -$390 (the losing long finally closed after 3 weeks, locking in pain).
Total after Week 3: — $463. The honeymoon was definitely over.
Week 4: The Last Push
The final week was a rollercoaster. The DCA Bot finally benefited from a relief bounce, trimming its losses a bit. The Grid Bot kept grinding out small profits, but nothing huge. The Futures Bot… well, let’s just say it confirmed my suspicion that leveraged bots are dangerous without constant monitoring.
By the end of 30 days:
Grid Bot: Total profit: + $108DCA Bot: Total P/L: — $72Futures Bot: Total P/L: — $428
Overall after 30 days: — $392.
What Worked and What Didn’t
What Worked
Grid Bot in sideways markets — When price chopped within a range, this bot printed small, steady profits.Hands-off execution — Bots did all the work. I didn’t have to stare at charts or react emotionally.
What Didn’t Work
Trend shifts — Bots can’t “think.” When the market trended or broke out, my Grid Bot became useless.Futures Bot without supervision — This was a disaster. Bots don’t manage news events or volatility well.Over-optimistic settings — I expected too much from the bots. They’re not magical money printers.
What I Would Do Differently
If I had to repeat this experiment, here’s what I’d change:
Stick to spot bots only — Futures bots are too risky without active management.Adjust ranges periodically — A Grid Bot needs range updates when the market trends.Diversify assets — Running multiple bots on different pairs can spread risk.Use small leverage (or none) — Leverage + automation = recipe for disaster unless you’re highly experienced.
Is Bot Trading Worth It?
Here’s the truth: bots aren’t a guaranteed money-making machine. They’re tools, not magic. In the right conditions (sideways markets, disciplined setups), they can make small, consistent profits. But if you expect them to crush trending or highly volatile markets without supervision, you’re in for disappointment.
Personally, I’ll still use bots — but only as a supplement to my manual trading, not as a replacement. Full automation sounds good in theory, but in practice, it’s not the holy grail.
Final Verdict
Was it profitable? No. I lost money.
Was it educational? Absolutely. I learned more about risk management and automation in these 30 days than in months of manual trading.
If you’re considering bots, start small, understand the strategy behind each bot, and never assume automation eliminates risk.
Would I recommend going 100% bot trading? Not unless you love stress and red numbers.
I Used Only Trading Bots for 30 Days — Was It Profitable? was originally published in Coinmonks on Medium, where people are continuing the conversation by highlighting and responding to this story.