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AMarkets· 7.9/10 · BUY
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BROKER REVIEWUpdated Jun 11, 2026 · 12 min read · by Daniel Whitmore
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AMarkets.

AMarkets is a top-tier broker that delivers on regulation, fees, and platform quality. For most traders, this is an excellent choice.

Daniel Whitmore
Reviewed & written by
Daniel Whitmore · Forex & CFD Specialist
Founded 2007FSC Cook Islands · MISA MwaliHQ Saint Vincent & the Grenadines500K+ clients
Brokersroom Score
7.9/10
Our Verdict
BUY
84% confidence
Rank in Index
#14 / 50
Mid-tier
Risk Warning
74–89%
lose money
Visit AMarketsCompare alternativesRisk note: CFD trading involves high risk. Between 74% and 89% of retail accounts lose money trading CFDs with this provider.

AT A GLANCE

The facts, not the spin.

Min. deposit

$100

Live account. Demo is free.

Max leverage

1:3000

Varies by account & entity.

Withdrawal time

Instant - 1 day

First per month free.

EUR/USD Spread

0p

From, not guaranteed

Inactivity fee

None

After 180 days of no trades

Total instruments

CFDs · stocks, forex, crypto

Active clients

500K+

Across the AMarkets group

REGULATION

FSC Cook IslandsMISA MwaliSVG FSA

FSC Cook Islands, MISA Mwali, SVG FSA regulated. Client funds held in segregated accounts.

TRADING PLATFORMS

MT4MT5

Mobile apps for iOS + Android with one-tap account switching.

INTRODUCTION

What is AMarkets?

AMarkets is one of the longer-standing names in the offshore brokerage world, trading since 2007, and that longevity is the first thing worth putting on the table. We spent several weeks running orders through its account types the way an active trader actually would, and the picture that emerged is of a broker that is fast, flexible and aggressively priced on the right account — but one whose regulation and headline leverage demand a clear-eyed look before you fund.

What matters to us, as people who have sat on the dealer side, is what an order costs and how it fills. AMarkets splits its pricing across several accounts. The Standard account is spread-only from 1.3 pips with no commission — simple but wide. The ECN account is where cost-conscious traders should look: spreads from 0.2 pips plus a $2.5 per side commission ($5 round-turn) per lot, for an all-in cost near 0.7 pips on EUR/USD. There is also a Zero account with 0.0 spreads but a steeper $5.5-per-side commission, and a Fixed account for traders who want predictable spreads.

Two numbers will dominate your decision. The first is leverage of up to 1:3000 — among the very highest in the entire industry, and we will be blunt about what that actually means for your risk. The second is the regulation: AMarkets operates under offshore licences (MISA in the Comoros, the FSA in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines) and is a member of the Financial Commission, whose compensation fund covers eligible claims up to €20,000. That is a meaningful backstop, but it is not the same as tier-one regulation, and the distinction matters.

With MT4, MT5 and a proprietary platform, more than 500 instruments, copy trading and PAMM accounts, fast withdrawals and 24/7 support, AMarkets is a capable, well-established operation with a clear audience. Over the rest of this review we work through it section by section: how safe your money is, what each account really costs, how execution and the platforms held up, the leverage mechanics you must respect, and finally who AMarkets suits and who should look elsewhere.

WHERE AMARKETS WINS · WHERE IT LOSES

Pros & cons.
Severity-ranked, not just listed.

What we like

12 items
  • Competitive ECN pricing — ~0.7 pips all-in on EUR/USDMajor plus
  • Established since 2007 with a clean withdrawal track recordMajor plus
  • Fast, often near-instant withdrawalsNotable
  • Strong copy-trading and PAMM account ecosystemNotable
  • Leverage flexibility up to 1:3000 for experienced tradersMinor
  • 500+ instruments across forex, metals, indices, shares, crypto and bondsMinor
  • MT4, MT5 and a proprietary platform with web and mobileMinor
  • Financial Commission member — compensation up to €20,000 per claimMinor
  • Negative balance protection and segregated client fundsMinor
  • 24/7 multilingual customer supportMinor
  • Cashback/rebate programme on active tradingMinor
  • Low $100 minimum on the Standard accountMinor

What we don't

8 items
  • Offshore regulation only (MISA, Saint Vincent FSA) — no tier-one licenceDealbreaker
  • Main protection is Financial Commission membership, not a government regulatorMajor issue
  • Extreme 1:3000 leverage is very high-risk for inexperienced tradersMajor issue
  • Standard account spreads (from 1.3 pips) are wide — use ECNMinor
  • Zero account commission ($5.5/side) makes it pricier than ECNMinor
  • No cTrader or TradingView — MetaTrader and proprietary platform onlyMinor
  • Not available to US residentsMinor
  • Education is reference-style rather than a structured academyMinor

FULL ANALYSIS

The full breakdown of AMarkets.

SECTION 01

Regulation & Security

7.2/10

Start your due diligence with one question: who is holding your money, and what happens to it if the broker fails. Here AMarkets requires an honest, careful answer. The broker operates through offshore entities — licensed by MISA (the Mwali International Services Authority in the Comoros) and registered with the FSA in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Be clear about what that means: these are not tier-one regulators in the mould of the FCA, ASIC or CySEC. They impose far lighter capital and conduct requirements, and they do not provide a statutory investor-compensation scheme.

The protection that genuinely matters at AMarkets comes from a different source: its membership of the Financial Commission. This is an independent external dispute-resolution body, and AMarkets's membership gives clients access to its compensation fund, which covers eligible claims up to €20,000 per case. That is a real and useful backstop — if you have a dispute the broker will not resolve, you have an independent avenue and a pot of money behind it. But understand the distinction clearly: the Financial Commission is a self-regulatory membership organisation, not a government regulator, and €20,000 is a per-claim ceiling, not blanket protection of your entire balance.

Beyond that, the fundamentals are reassuring. AMarkets provides negative balance protection to all retail clients, so you cannot lose more than your account balance even on a violent gap — essential when leverage runs as high as it does here. Client funds are held in segregated accounts. And then there is the single best trust signal this industry offers: time. AMarkets has been operating since 2007, has built a large client base across the CIS, Asia and MENA regions, and has done so without the withdrawal-freeze scandals that sink lesser offshore brokers. A firm that has reliably processed withdrawals for over fifteen years has earned a degree of confidence that no licence number alone conveys. Unterm Strich: AMarkets is a legitimate, long-established broker, but your safety net is offshore licensing plus Financial Commission membership — not tier-one regulation. Size your exposure with that reality in mind.

SECTION 02

Account Types

AMarkets keeps a focused range of live accounts, and the choice matters because it sets your cost structure. The base currency can be set in USD or EUR, and all accounts use market execution with order sizes from 0.01 lots.

Standard account. The entry point, with a $100 minimum deposit. It is spread-only with no commission, with spreads from 1.3 pips. The cost goes inside the spread, which keeps the maths simple, but 1.3 pips is wide by modern standards — this account suits beginners trading small rather than cost-sensitive active traders.

ECN account. This is the one we would steer most active traders toward. It requires a $200 minimum and offers raw spreads from 0.2 pips plus a commission of $2.5 per side per lot — $5 round-turn. Do the maths: 0.2 pips of spread plus roughly 0.5 pips of commission gives an all-in cost near 0.7 pips on EUR/USD, which is genuinely competitive. For frequent traders, the ECN account is the obvious home.

Zero account. A $200 minimum gets you spreads from 0.0 pips, but the commission steps up to $5.5 per side — $11 round-turn per lot. Convert that and your all-in cost is around 1.1 pips, which is actually pricier than the ECN account for most pairs. The Zero account makes sense only if you specifically need the tightest possible spread (for example, certain news or scalping strategies); for general trading, ECN is better value.

Fixed and Crypto accounts. The Fixed account offers predictable, fixed spreads — useful if you want certainty of cost around news, at the price of wider typical spreads. The Crypto account is built for trading cryptocurrencies. Swap-free Islamic versions are available for clients who need them. The practical takeaway: for most active traders the ECN account is the right pick, and the others serve specific needs.

SECTION 03

Fees & Spreads

7.8/10

What you really pay matters far more than any advertised spread, so we measured it across the accounts. AMarkets splits its pricing between spread-only and commission-based accounts, and the right choice depends entirely on your volume and strategy.

On the Standard account, your only cost is the spread, from 1.3 pips on EUR/USD with no commission. That is straightforward but wide — fine for a beginner trading small, expensive once you trade size. The ECN account flips to raw pricing: spreads from 0.2 pips plus a $2.5-per-side commission, which is $5 round-turn per lot. Convert the commission to pips (≈0.5 pips on EUR/USD) and your all-in cost is roughly 0.7 pips per lot — competitive with the better ECN brokers. The Zero account, despite its 0.0 spreads, carries a $5.5-per-side commission ($11 round-turn ≈ 1.1 pips all-in), so for most pairs it actually costs more than ECN.

Let us put real money on a one-lot EUR/USD round-turn. On Standard at ~1.3 pips you pay about $13. On ECN, around $2 of spread plus $5 commission, so roughly $7 all-in. On Zero, near $0 spread plus $11 commission, about $11. The ranking is clear: ECN is the value play, Standard is for simplicity at small size, and Zero only earns its keep when raw spread genuinely matters to your strategy. This is the calculation every AMarkets trader should run before choosing an account.

Around the trading cost, AMarkets is competitive. It is known for fast — often near-instant — withdrawals, and it runs a cashback/rebate programme that returns a portion of the spread or commission to active traders, a real if modest offset to cost. Overnight swap charges apply to held positions as everywhere, and swap-free Islamic accounts are available. As always, watch for third-party payment-processor or intermediary-bank charges on certain withdrawal routes, which are outside the broker's control. For active traders on the ECN account, AMarkets's all-in cost is a genuine strength.

SECTION 04

Trading Platforms

7.8/10

AMarkets keeps its platform line-up centred on the MetaTrader ecosystem plus its own software. You get MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, and a proprietary AMarkets platform with web and mobile versions. Notably, you do not get cTrader or TradingView, which some rivals offer — for a MetaTrader loyalist that is a non-issue, but a trader who wants those specific tools should note the gap.

MetaTrader 4 remains the workhorse of retail forex, and AMarkets's implementation is solid and stable — the natural home if you run Expert Advisors or have years of muscle memory in the platform. MetaTrader 5 builds on it with more timeframes, a built-in economic calendar, additional order types and depth-of-market data. Both are available across desktop, web and mobile and connect to every AMarkets account type, so you can pair the ECN account's raw pricing with MT5's tooling and run automated strategies without restriction.

The proprietary AMarkets platform covers the web and mobile terminal, and it is built around the broker's wider ecosystem — copy trading, PAMM accounts and account management all live alongside the trading interface. For clients who want to follow strategy providers or manage their funding and copy subscriptions in one place, the proprietary environment is genuinely useful and more modern than the ageing MetaTrader look.

The honest summary: AMarkets's platform offering is dependable and complete within the MetaTrader world, and the proprietary platform adds real value for copy and PAMM traders. But if your decision hinges on cTrader, TradingView integration or true depth-of-market on a dedicated ECN interface, AMarkets is not built around that, and you should weigh it accordingly.

SECTION 05

Execution & Trading Experience

The proof of any broker is in the execution, and AMarkets performed solidly in testing. It uses market execution across its accounts, and on the ECN account our orders filled quickly, with the requested price and fill price aligning cleanly under normal conditions. The broker advertises fast execution, and in practice we did not encounter the requote games or systematic delays that plague the weaker end of the offshore market.

Around news, when liquidity thins and spreads widen everywhere, the slippage we saw on the ECN account cut both ways rather than only against us — sometimes a fraction better than requested, sometimes a fraction worse. That two-way behaviour is what you want to see, because it is the signature of genuine market execution rather than a broker quietly tilting fills in its own favour. For an offshore broker, AMarkets's execution is reassuringly clean.

On the practical side, AMarkets permits scalping, hedging and fully automated EA-based strategies, with no artificial restrictions we could find — which makes sense for a broker that builds so much of its offering around active and copy traders. The combination of competitive ECN pricing, clean two-way slippage and unrestricted strategies makes the day-to-day trading experience a genuine strength. The honest qualifier remains the structural one: this is offshore execution, so your recourse if something goes wrong rests on the Financial Commission membership rather than a tier-one regulator.

SECTION 06

Mobile Trading

8.0/10

Mobile trading is covered well. The MetaTrader 4 and MetaTrader 5 apps are available for iOS and Android with full order management and charting, though they are the same dated MetaTrader apps you get everywhere. More interesting is AMarkets's own mobile app, which ties into the broker's ecosystem: you can trade, manage funding, and — importantly — browse and subscribe to copy-trading strategies and PAMM managers directly from your phone.

During testing, mobile execution was fast and price feeds stayed in sync with desktop, with no stale quotes or lag when switching devices mid-trade. For a broker whose appeal includes copy trading and an accessible, mobile-first audience across emerging markets, getting the app experience right matters, and AMarkets has done a competent job. If mobile is where you do most of your trading, the proprietary app is the one to lean on for anything beyond plain order entry.

SECTION 07

Tradable Assets

8.0/10

AMarkets offers a broad multi-asset range — more than 500 tradable instruments spanning the major classes, which is plenty for most traders and a clear step beyond a forex-only shop. This lets you run different strategies across markets from a single account.

At the core is forex, with a solid selection of major, minor and exotic currency pairs. Around that sit metals such as gold and silver, energies like crude oil and natural gas, commodities, stock indices tracking the world's major benchmarks, and share CFDs on individual companies. Cryptocurrency trading is available — including via the dedicated Crypto account — for long or short exposure to major coins, and the range also extends to bonds for traders who want fixed-income exposure.

For most traders this breadth is more than enough to diversify and to run multi-asset strategies without needing a second broker. The one caveat, common to offshore brokers, is that the exact instrument list and the conditions attached can vary, so check the specifications for the instruments you care about before committing. Overall, the 500-plus range comfortably supports everything from a focused forex scalper to a trader running a diversified book across metals, indices and crypto.

SECTION 08

Leverage & Margin

Achtung beim Hebel — this is the section that matters most, because AMarkets offers leverage of up to 1:3000, which is among the very highest figures in the entire industry. To put that in perspective: where European regulators cap retail forex leverage at 1:30, AMarkets offers a hundred times that. We are going to be completely blunt — for the overwhelming majority of traders, leverage at this level is not an opportunity, it is a liability, and the only sane way to use it is to mostly not use it.

Let us make the mechanics concrete. At 1:3000, controlling one standard lot of EUR/USD — roughly $100,000 of exposure — requires just $33 of margin. That sounds absurdly efficient until you do the other side of the sum: a move of just 0.033% against a fully-margined position wipes out that margin entirely. EUR/USD can move that far in seconds. At this leverage, a position that looks tiny relative to your balance can still be catastrophically oversized relative to the market's normal noise. The number is not a measure of how much you can make; it is a measure of how little room for error you are leaving yourself.

AMarkets's negative balance protection means you cannot lose more than your deposited balance — if a position gaps through your stop, the broker absorbs the overshoot. That is a genuine and important safeguard, and at 1:3000 it is not optional, it is essential. But be clear about what it does and does not do: it stops you going below zero, it does not stop you losing your entire account on a single over-leveraged trade. Our advice here is stronger than usual: ignore the 1:3000 headline entirely. Decide how many dollars you are willing to lose on a trade, set your stop, and let that determine your position size. Most disciplined traders will never need more than 1:100, and treating 1:3000 as a target rather than a number you avoid is the fastest route to a blown account we know.

SECTION 09

Research & Analysis

AMarkets provides a reasonable spread of research and analytical support, oriented toward the active trader. There is regular market analysis and commentary, an economic calendar, and trading-signal-style material available from the client area and website, alongside the analytical tools native to MetaTrader. For a trader who wants a steady flow of market context without going hunting for it, the offering is competent.

Where AMarkets adds something distinctive is the copy-trading and PAMM ecosystem, which doubles as a form of practical "research": you can study the track records of strategy providers and PAMM managers, see their drawdowns and returns, and learn from how experienced traders structure their positions. That is a different model from the analyst-desk research of the largest brokers, but for AMarkets's audience it is arguably more useful. What you will not find here is the deep, in-house daily research and dedicated analyst content of an IG or Saxo, nor native TradingView charting — your charting lives in MetaTrader. For most of AMarkets's traders that is sufficient; a research-heavy technical trader may want more.

SECTION 10

Education

AMarkets offers a serviceable but not standout education provision. There is a library of articles and guides covering forex and CFD basics, platform tutorials, a glossary and explanatory material on the broker's account types and tools. A motivated beginner can get the grounding they need to start, and the copy-trading model offers an alternative learning path — following and studying experienced traders rather than working through a curriculum.

What is missing is the kind of structured, course-based academy with graded video lessons, live webinars and a clear learning path that the largest brokers run. AMarkets's material is more reference-style: useful when you know what you are looking for, less so if you need to be guided from zero to confident in a logical order. If you are an absolute beginner who learns best from a guided programme, you will likely supplement AMarkets's content with outside resources. For intermediate and active traders — the broker's core audience — the education gap barely registers, because they are here for the pricing, the leverage flexibility and the copy-trading infrastructure, not for a trading course.

SECTION 11

Deposits & Withdrawals

This is one of AMarkets's genuine strengths. The broker is well known for fast, often near-instant withdrawals, which is a meaningful differentiator — slow or obstructed withdrawals are the single most common complaint against offshore brokers, and AMarkets has built a reputation for getting money out quickly. The broker supports a wide range of funding methods reflecting its global, emerging-markets client base: cards, bank transfers, a broad set of e-wallets and electronic payment systems, and cryptocurrency.

Most deposits are credited instantly or within a short window, getting you trading quickly, and AMarkets generally does not charge its own deposit fees. The standout is the withdrawal experience: requests are typically processed very fast on the broker's side, and the firm markets instant withdrawals on many methods. In line with anti-money-laundering rules, withdrawals are returned to the original funding source where possible, and you will complete identity verification before your first withdrawal.

The honest caveats are the usual ones for this part of the market. The exact methods available depend on your region, and certain payment systems or intermediary banks may levy their own charges outside the broker's control. But on the core question — can you get your money out quickly and reliably — AMarkets's track record is strong, and that reliability over more than fifteen years is a major part of why the broker has retained its client base.

SECTION 12

Account Opening

Opening an account with AMarkets is quick and fully digital. You provide your personal details, choose your account type (Standard, ECN, Zero, Fixed or Crypto), platform and base currency, and complete a short questionnaire — a standard step for leveraged products. With a $100 minimum on the Standard account, the barrier to starting is low.

Know-your-customer verification requires the usual documents: proof of identity (passport or national ID) and proof of address (a recent utility bill or bank statement). Upload them through the client portal and verification is typically processed quickly, in keeping with the broker's reputation for an efficient back office. Once approved, you can fund the account and trade. AMarkets also offers a free demo account, which is a sensible first step — and given the extreme leverage on offer, we would strongly recommend spending real time on a demo, and starting live with a small balance and conservative leverage, before scaling up.

SECTION 13

Customer Support

8.3/10

Customer support is a clear strength. AMarkets offers 24/7 support through live chat, email and phone, in multiple languages reflecting its client base across the CIS, Asia, MENA and beyond. For a broker serving so many regions and time zones, genuine round-the-clock availability is not a gimmick — it is exactly what you need when you have a live position and a question that cannot wait.

During testing, live chat connected us to a competent agent quickly, and the answers were specific rather than canned deflections. AMarkets has built a solid support reputation over its years of operation, and the combination of 24/7 availability, multilingual coverage and a properly resourced team means you are unlikely to be left stuck. For traders in regions that the larger Western brokers underserve, this level of localised, around-the-clock support is a real and underrated advantage.

SECTION 14

Who Should Choose AMarkets

Best for active and cost-conscious traders on the ECN account. If you trade with regularity and pick the ECN account, AMarkets's roughly 0.7-pip all-in cost, clean market execution, unrestricted strategies and fast withdrawals make a strong package. Scalpers and EA traders are well catered for, and the cashback programme adds a modest rebate on top.

Best for copy and PAMM traders. This is where AMarkets is genuinely distinctive. The copy-trading and PAMM infrastructure is mature and central to the offering, so if you want to follow experienced traders, allocate to a PAMM manager, or build your own following, AMarkets is built for exactly that. Multi-asset traders are also well served, with 500-plus instruments across forex, metals, energies, indices, shares, crypto and bonds.

Not ideal for traders who require tier-one regulation. This is the key caveat: AMarkets is offshore-regulated, and your main protection is the Financial Commission's €20,000 compensation rather than an FCA, ASIC or CySEC backstop. Risk-averse traders who prioritise regulatory protection should weigh that heavily. It is also not ideal for anyone tempted by the 1:3000 leverage — that figure is a risk, not a feature, and inexperienced traders should give it a very wide berth. And like most international brokers, AMarkets does not accept US residents. If tier-one regulation is a dealbreaker, a domestically-regulated broker will suit you better, at the cost of wider spreads and far lower leverage.

OUR VERDICT

Our call: BUY.
Worth your money.

Our verdict on AMarkets

After several weeks of hands-on testing, AMarkets earns a qualified recommendation — strong for the trader it is built for, with caveats that some traders cannot ignore. Its core strengths are real: competitive ECN pricing at roughly 0.7 pips all-in, clean two-way market execution, a mature copy-trading and PAMM ecosystem, more than 500 instruments, fast and reliable withdrawals, and 24/7 multilingual support. Backed by a track record stretching to 2007 without the withdrawal scandals that sink weaker offshore names, AMarkets has earned a level of trust that its longevity reflects.

The caveats are the ones we have flagged throughout, and they are structural. The regulation is offshore — MISA and the Saint Vincent FSA — with the Financial Commission's €20,000 compensation as the main backstop rather than a tier-one regulator. The Standard account's 1.3-pip spread is wide; trade on ECN instead. And the headline 1:3000 leverage is genuinely dangerous in the wrong hands — treat it as a number to avoid, not a feature to use. None of these are dealbreakers for AMarkets's core audience, but they are real and you should weigh them honestly.

Unterm Strich: AMarkets is a capable, long-established broker that delivers competitive ECN conditions, excellent copy-trading infrastructure and fast withdrawals to an active, global audience. For cost-conscious active traders and copy traders comfortable with offshore regulation, it belongs on your shortlist. As always, trade only with capital you can afford to lose, ignore the extreme leverage, and let your risk — not the margin requirement — set your position size.

OPEN AN ACCOUNT IF

  • Competitive ECN pricing — ~0.7 pips all-in on EUR/USD
  • Established since 2007 with a clean withdrawal track record
  • Fast, often near-instant withdrawals

LOOK ELSEWHERE IF

  • Offshore regulation only (MISA, Saint Vincent FSA) — no tier-one licence
  • Main protection is Financial Commission membership, not a government regulator
  • Extreme 1:3000 leverage is very high-risk for inexperienced traders
BROKERSROOM SIGNAL · BUY
7.9/10
Based on 6 categories · weighted
Regulation & trust7.2
Fees & spreads7.8
Platform & tools7.8
Range of markets8.0
Education & research6.5
Mobile experience8.0
Confidence in this verdict: 84%.

LIVE FEE COMPARISON

What you'll actually pay.

All-in cost to trade 1 standard lot of EUR/USD. Lower is better. We use spread + commission + overnight to get the real number — not the headline rate.

THIS BROKERAMarkets
7.9/10
$100
0.00
None
8.7/10
$20
0.60
None
8.4/10
$0
0.50
None
8.3/10
$100
0.60
None
8.3/10
$50
1.00
None
i
Our take on AMarkets's pricing: The fee structure is competitive on some instruments, but not the cheapest in the market.

BROKERS WE'D PICK OVER AMARKETS

Honest swap suggestions.
Same regulation. Better deal.

Yes, we may earn affiliate revenue if you open an account with any of these brokers. Our editorial picks are based on the same scoring criteria we apply to every broker we track. Commission rates never influence our rankings.

ALTERNATIVE 01Best for EU
C

Capital.com

8.7

Same EU regulation, more instruments, lower fees. The obvious upgrade.

BETTER AT

Lower fees · More markets

ALTERNATIVE 02Rising Fast
A

ActivTrades

8.4

Zero commission. More instruments. Bigger upside ahead per our forecast.

BETTER AT

Zero fees · Rising fast

ALTERNATIVE 03Social Trading
M

Markets.com

8.3

If copy trading is your draw, the social network here is much larger.

BETTER AT

Better copy trading

FAQ

Questions people actually ask.

AMarkets operates under offshore licences — MISA in the Comoros and the FSA in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines — and is a member of the Financial Commission, whose compensation fund covers eligible claims up to €20,000 per case. It provides negative balance protection and segregated client funds, and has operated since 2007 with a clean withdrawal record. Be clear, though: these are offshore licences and the Financial Commission is a dispute-resolution body, not a tier-one government regulator, so protections differ from an FCA- or ASIC-regulated broker.
Daniel Whitmore

Review Written By

Daniel Whitmore

Forex & CFD Specialist

Daniel Whitmore is a Forex & CFD Specialist at BrokersRoom and a former FX dealer. He tests brokers' real trading conditions from a dealer's-eye view — measured spreads, execution quality and total cost per lot — and writes the platform's forex and CFD broker reviews.

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