BrokerFeesCompare

How We Compare and Rate Brokers at BrokerFeesCompare

A transparent, cost-focused methodology built on six weighted categories, verified data sources, and quarterly updates to ensure accuracy in 2026

Sarah Chen
By Sarah Chen Crypto & DeFi Specialist

Why Methodology Matters for Broker Comparisons

Most broker comparison sites get the fundamentals wrong. They weight brand recognition over actual trading costs, or they assign high scores to brokers that pay for placement. The BrokerFeesCompare methodology is built on a different premise: the true cost of trading is the single most important variable for retail traders, and every scoring decision should reflect that.

This page documents exactly how every broker rating on this site is produced. You will find the specific weights assigned to each scoring category, the data sources used, the verification process applied, and the schedule on which scores are refreshed. If you have ever wondered why one broker ranks above another here, this page provides the complete answer.

The broker comparison methodology described below was designed with one audience in mind: traders who are just starting out and who cannot afford to lose money to avoidable fees. Hidden charges, wide spreads, and punishing overnight financing rates can erode a beginner's account faster than any losing trade. Transparency about how we evaluate these costs is, therefore, not optional. It is the foundation of this site.

A Note on Independence

BrokerFeesCompare earns revenue through referral arrangements with some brokers listed on this site. That commercial relationship does not influence scores. Brokers cannot pay to improve their rating. If a broker's fees increase between review cycles, its score drops at the next update regardless of any commercial arrangement. The weighting system described below is applied uniformly to every broker evaluated.

Our Six Scoring Categories

The BrokerFeesCompare broker review criteria are organized into six distinct categories. Each category measures a specific dimension of the trading cost experience. Together, they produce a composite score out of 5.0 that reflects the overall cost efficiency and reliability of each broker.

1. Spreads and Commissions (30%)

This is the largest single category in the scoring model, and deliberately so. The bid-ask spread is the primary cost of every trade a retail investor places. For a beginner trading EUR/USD, a difference of 0.5 pips per trade may seem trivial. Across 200 trades per year, it becomes a meaningful drag on returns. This category measures the average spread on the five most commonly traded instruments: EUR/USD, GBP/USD, Gold (XAU/USD), US30, and US500. Commission charges on stock CFDs and raw spread accounts are converted to a pip-equivalent cost and included in the calculation.

2. Overnight Financing Rates (20%)

Swap rates, also called rollover rates or overnight financing charges, apply whenever a leveraged position is held past the daily market close. For traders who hold positions for days or weeks rather than minutes, these charges can exceed the spread cost by a significant margin. This category collects the long and short swap rates for the same five benchmark instruments used in the spreads analysis, then benchmarks them against the prevailing interbank reference rate to assess whether the broker's financing markup is competitive.

3. Inactivity and Account Fees (20%)

Many brokers charge a monthly or quarterly fee if an account has not placed a trade within a defined period, typically 12 months. For beginners who may pause trading after early losses, these fees quietly drain account balances. This category scores brokers on whether they charge inactivity fees, how large those fees are, and whether they impose minimum balance requirements or account maintenance charges.

4. Deposit and Withdrawal Costs (15%)

Currency conversion fees and withdrawal charges are among the most commonly overlooked costs in broker selection. A broker that charges a 1.5% currency conversion fee on every deposit effectively raises the cost of every trade for traders whose base currency differs from the account denomination. This category evaluates deposit fees, withdrawal fees, minimum withdrawal thresholds, and the availability of fee-free payment methods including bank wire, Visa/Mastercard, and e-wallets such as Skrill and Neteller.

5. Platform Value (10%)

Platform quality is scored on a narrower basis here than on general broker review sites. The focus is on features that directly affect cost management: the quality of the charting tools for identifying entry and exit points, the availability of risk management instruments such as stop-loss orders and negative balance protection, and whether a free demo account is provided for practice without financial risk. Advanced features such as API access or Level 2 data are not scored in this category.

6. Regulatory Standing (5%)

Regulatory oversight receives the smallest weight in this model, not because it is unimportant, but because all brokers reviewed on BrokerFeesCompare must meet a minimum regulatory threshold to be listed at all. A broker regulated only by an offshore authority such as SVG or Vanuatu is excluded from the main comparison tables. Among listed brokers, higher scores are awarded for licenses from tier-one regulators including the FCA (UK), ASIC (Australia), and CySEC (EU), and for membership in investor compensation schemes that protect client funds up to a defined limit.

Overall Rating

3.2
Spreads and Commissions 5.0
Overnight Financing Rates 4.0
Inactivity and Account Fees 4.0
Deposit and Withdrawal Costs 3.0
Platform Value 2.0
Regulatory Standing 1.0

Category Weights: The Reasoning Behind the Numbers

The trading cost evaluation framework used here assigns 85% of the total score to direct and indirect financial costs. That figure reflects a deliberate analytical choice. Platform aesthetics, customer service response times, and the breadth of educational content all matter to beginners. But none of those factors directly reduce the amount of money a trader loses to fees. A broker with a beautiful interface and a 1.8-pip EUR/USD spread will cost a trader significantly more over a year than a plain-looking broker with a 0.9-pip spread.

The 30% weight on spreads and commissions reflects the frequency with which this cost is incurred. Every single trade carries a spread cost. No other fee category has that frequency. Overnight financing at 20% reflects the compounding nature of swap charges for position traders. A trader holding a leveraged Gold position for 30 days will pay financing charges that can rival the initial spread cost many times over.

Inactivity fees at 20% receive higher weight than deposit costs at 15% because the research data collected across dozens of brokers consistently shows that beginner traders are disproportionately affected by inactivity charges. Many new traders open an account, place a few trades, then pause for weeks or months while they continue learning. During that pause, inactivity fees can quietly consume the remaining balance.

The 5% weight on regulatory standing reflects a gatekeeping function rather than a differentiating one. Brokers regulated by the FCA, ASIC, or CySEC all provide a broadly comparable level of investor protection. The score in this category distinguishes between tier-one and tier-two regulation, but the differences within the listed broker set are less impactful on the average beginner than a 0.3-pip difference in the EUR/USD spread.

How We Collect and Verify Broker Data

1

Live Account Data Collection

Spread and swap data is collected from live trading accounts, not from broker marketing materials. Spreads are sampled at three points during the London trading session and one point during the New York session, then averaged. This reflects the conditions most retail traders actually experience.

2

Fee Schedule Cross-Reference

Published fee schedules, terms and conditions documents, and account agreement PDFs are reviewed directly from each broker's official website. Deposit and withdrawal fees are cross-referenced against the broker's payment method pages and any applicable third-party processor documentation.

3

Regulatory Status Verification

Regulatory status is verified against the public registers of the FCA (UK), ASIC (Australia), CySEC (Cyprus), DFSA (UAE), and SEBI (India) where applicable. License numbers are confirmed directly on the regulator's official database, not taken from broker self-reporting.

4

Demo Account Testing

Platform scores are based on hands-on testing of the demo account environment. The evaluation covers order placement speed, stop-loss functionality, charting tool responsiveness, and mobile app performance. Demo accounts are used rather than live accounts to ensure consistent testing conditions.

5

User Review Aggregation

Verified user reviews from Trustpilot and Google Reviews are analyzed for patterns related to fee disputes, withdrawal delays, and platform reliability issues. No individual review is treated as definitive, but consistent patterns across 50 or more reviews are noted in the broker's qualitative assessment.

6

Score Calculation and Peer Review

Raw data is entered into the scoring model, which produces a weighted composite score. The output is reviewed by a second analyst before publication to check for data entry errors and to flag any anomalies that warrant additional investigation.

How Scores Are Calculated: The Scoring Model in Detail

Each of the six categories produces a sub-score between 1.0 and 5.0. The sub-scores are then multiplied by the category weight and summed to produce the composite score. A broker that scores 5.0 on spreads (30% weight), 4.0 on overnight financing (20%), 4.5 on inactivity fees (20%), 4.0 on deposit costs (15%), 3.5 on platform value (10%), and 4.5 on regulation (5%) would receive a composite score of approximately 4.3.

Spreads Sub-Score Benchmarks

  • 5.0: Average EUR/USD spread below 0.7 pips across all session samples
  • 4.0 to 4.9: Average EUR/USD spread between 0.7 and 1.2 pips
  • 3.0 to 3.9: Average EUR/USD spread between 1.2 and 1.8 pips
  • 2.0 to 2.9: Average EUR/USD spread between 1.8 and 2.5 pips
  • Below 2.0: Average EUR/USD spread above 2.5 pips

Overnight Financing Sub-Score Benchmarks

Swap rates are benchmarked against the prevailing SOFR (Secured Overnight Financing Rate) or ESTR rate, depending on the currency pair. A broker charging a financing markup of less than 0.5% annualized above the reference rate scores 5.0. Each additional 0.5% of markup reduces the score by approximately 0.5 points.

Inactivity Fee Sub-Score Benchmarks

  • 5.0: No inactivity fee charged under any circumstances
  • 4.0: Inactivity fee charged after 12 months or more of inactivity, below $10 per month
  • 3.0: Inactivity fee charged after 6 to 12 months, between $10 and $15 per month
  • 2.0: Inactivity fee charged after less than 6 months, or above $15 per month

Deposit and Withdrawal Sub-Score Benchmarks

Brokers offering fee-free deposits and withdrawals via at least three payment methods, including one e-wallet option, score 5.0 in this category. Each fee-bearing method, currency conversion charge, or minimum withdrawal threshold above $50 reduces the score proportionally.

Platform Value Sub-Score Benchmarks

The platform sub-score is based on five equally weighted criteria: availability of a free demo account, presence of negative balance protection, quality of stop-loss order functionality, mobile app reliability, and access to basic charting tools. Each criterion is scored as present (1.0) or absent (0.0), producing a raw score out of 5 that is then normalized to the 1.0 to 5.0 scale.

Our Update and Review Cycle

Broker fees change. Spreads widen during periods of low liquidity. Brokers revise their swap rate structures in response to central bank rate movements. Inactivity fee policies are updated in terms and conditions documents with little public notice. A methodology that collects data once and never revisits it is not a methodology. It is a historical record.

BrokerFeesCompare operates on a quarterly full review cycle. Every broker in the comparison database is re-evaluated against all six scoring categories once every three months. Between full reviews, a continuous monitoring process flags material changes.

Continuous Monitoring Triggers

  • Any change to a broker's published fee schedule or terms and conditions
  • A regulatory action, warning, or license suspension issued by a tier-one regulator
  • A pattern of withdrawal complaints emerging in verified user review platforms
  • A significant movement in interbank reference rates that would affect swap rate benchmarking
  • A broker merger, acquisition, or rebranding event

When a monitoring trigger is detected, the affected category is re-scored within five business days. The composite score is updated immediately if the change is material, defined as a shift of 0.2 points or more in the composite score. Minor changes are batched into the next quarterly review.

Data as of 2026

All scores and fee data published on BrokerFeesCompare reflect the most recent quarterly review cycle. Given the rate environment and spread conditions observed through early 2026, overnight financing costs have received particular attention in the current review cycle. Central bank policy shifts in major economies have created meaningful divergence in swap rates across brokers, and the scoring model has been calibrated to reflect current interbank reference rates rather than historical averages.

Featured Broker Scores Under This Methodology

The brokers featured on BrokerFeesCompare have each been evaluated under the methodology described above. The scores below reflect the most recent quarterly review. Beginners comparing these brokers should pay particular attention to the minimum deposit requirements and inactivity fee policies, as these two factors tend to have the most immediate impact on a new trader's account.

Score Summary: Featured Brokers

  • IG Markets - Composite score: 4.6. Scores strongly on regulatory standing (FCA, ASIC, CySEC regulated) and platform value. No minimum deposit required to open an account, which is a notable advantage for beginners testing the waters with a small initial commitment.
  • eToro - Composite score: 4.5. The copy trading feature is a meaningful platform value differentiator for beginners. Minimum deposit of $50 is accessible. Spread costs on some instruments are above the benchmark average, which is reflected in the spreads sub-score.
  • Libertex - Composite score: 4.4. Competitive on commission structure with a minimum deposit of $100. The platform is straightforward for beginners and includes a demo account. Regulatory standing under CySEC provides EU-level investor protections.
  • Exness - Composite score: 4.4. Particularly strong on deposit and withdrawal costs, with multiple fee-free payment methods and a low minimum deposit of approximately $10 on the Standard account. Swap rates are competitive relative to the interbank benchmark.
  • IC Markets - Composite score: 4.3. Raw spread accounts offer some of the tightest spreads in the comparison set, which scores well in the primary 30% category. The commission-per-lot model requires beginners to understand the total cost calculation, which adds a small layer of complexity.
  • XTB - Composite score: 4.2. No inactivity fee for the first 12 months, which is favorable for the inactivity fee category. Spread costs on the standard account are moderate. FCA and CySEC regulation provides solid investor protection.
  • FxPro - Composite score: 4.2. Multiple account types create flexibility but also complexity for beginners. The $100 minimum deposit is standard. Regulatory coverage includes FCA and CySEC. Swap rates are in line with the peer group average.

These scores are composite figures. A broker with a 4.2 composite score may score higher than a 4.5-rated broker on a specific category. Traders with a particular sensitivity to overnight financing costs, for example, should examine the swap rate sub-scores rather than relying solely on the composite figure.

Our Commitment to Accuracy and Independence

Quarterly Data Updates

All broker scores are refreshed every three months

Live Account Verified

Spread data collected from live trading accounts, not marketing materials

Regulatory Cross-Check

License status verified against FCA, ASIC, and CySEC public registers

Cost-First Methodology

85% of the composite score reflects direct and indirect trading costs

No Pay-to-Rank Policy

Commercial arrangements do not influence broker scores

Transparent Weighting

Full category weights and benchmarks published on this page

Frequently Asked Questions About Our Methodology

What is the BrokerFeesCompare broker comparison methodology?
The BrokerFeesCompare methodology is a weighted scoring system that evaluates brokers across six categories: spreads and commissions (30%), overnight financing rates (20%), inactivity and account fees (20%), deposit and withdrawal costs (15%), platform value (10%), and regulatory standing (5%). Each category produces a sub-score between 1.0 and 5.0, and the weighted average of those sub-scores produces the composite rating displayed on the site.
How often are broker scores updated on BrokerFeesCompare?
Broker scores are fully reviewed on a quarterly cycle, meaning every broker in the comparison database is re-evaluated against all six categories four times per year. Between quarterly reviews, a continuous monitoring process tracks material changes such as fee schedule updates, regulatory actions, or significant shifts in interbank reference rates. If a change causes a composite score to move by 0.2 points or more, the score is updated within five business days.
Why do spreads and commissions receive the highest weight at 30%?
Spreads and commissions receive the highest weight because they are the only cost category that applies to every single trade a retail investor places. No other fee is as frequent. For a beginner placing 200 trades per year, a 0.5-pip difference in the EUR/USD spread translates to a meaningful annual cost difference. The 30% weight reflects this frequency and the direct impact on trading returns.
How does BrokerFeesCompare verify broker regulatory status?
Regulatory status is verified directly against the public registers of the relevant regulatory authorities, including the FCA in the UK, ASIC in Australia, CySEC in Cyprus, DFSA in the UAE, and SEBI in India where applicable. License numbers are confirmed on the regulator's official database rather than taken from broker self-reporting. This verification is repeated at each quarterly review cycle and whenever a monitoring trigger related to regulatory status is detected.
Does paying for advertising or referral arrangements affect a broker's score?
No. BrokerFeesCompare earns revenue through referral arrangements with some listed brokers, but those commercial relationships do not influence scores. The weighting system is applied uniformly to every broker evaluated. A broker cannot pay to improve its rating, and if a broker's fees increase between review cycles, its score is reduced at the next update regardless of any commercial arrangement.
Why does regulatory standing only account for 5% of the composite score?
Regulatory standing receives 5% weight because it functions as a gatekeeping criterion rather than a differentiating one. All brokers listed on BrokerFeesCompare must meet a minimum regulatory threshold to appear in comparison tables. Among listed brokers, the practical differences in investor protection between FCA, ASIC, and CySEC regulation are relatively small compared to the financial impact of a 0.3-pip difference in the EUR/USD spread. The 5% weight distinguishes between tier-one and tier-two regulation without overstating its relative importance to trading costs.
How are overnight financing rates evaluated in the scoring model?
Overnight financing rates, also called swap rates, are benchmarked against the prevailing SOFR or ESTR interbank reference rate depending on the currency pair. A broker charging a financing markup of less than 0.5% annualized above the reference rate scores 5.0 in this category. Each additional 0.5% of markup reduces the score by approximately 0.5 points. The benchmark rates used are updated at each quarterly review to reflect current central bank policy settings.
What is the minimum regulatory requirement for a broker to be listed on BrokerFeesCompare?
Brokers must hold a license from a recognized financial regulatory authority to be listed in the main comparison tables. Brokers regulated solely by offshore authorities such as St. Vincent and the Grenadines (SVG) or Vanuatu are excluded from the main comparison tables. Accepted regulators include the FCA (UK), ASIC (Australia), CySEC (Cyprus), DFSA (UAE), SEBI (India), and other recognized national authorities. The specific regulatory entity under which a trader opens an account may differ from the broker's primary regulatory registration, so traders are advised to verify the entity applicable to their country of residence.

A Final Note on Using This Methodology

The composite score produced by this methodology is a useful starting point, not a final answer. Two brokers with identical composite scores can differ significantly on individual categories. A trader who holds positions overnight for days at a time should weight the overnight financing sub-score more heavily than the composite figure suggests. A trader who expects to deposit and withdraw frequently should examine the deposit and withdrawal sub-score in detail.

The broker review criteria described here are designed to surface the most cost-relevant information for the broadest range of beginner traders. That means the 30% weight on spreads reflects the median retail trading behavior, not the behavior of every individual trader. You might find that your specific trading pattern makes one category more important than the weights imply.

All fee data, spread samples, and regulatory information are collected and verified as described above. Errors are possible. If you identify a factual discrepancy between data published on this site and data available directly from a broker's official documentation, the contact form on this site accepts correction submissions. Verified corrections are applied within five business days.

Trading in leveraged instruments carries significant risk of loss. The methodology described on this page evaluates costs and regulatory standing. It does not evaluate the suitability of any broker or any financial instrument for any individual trader's circumstances. Traders should assess their own risk tolerance and, where appropriate, seek independent financial advice before opening a live trading account.

Broker Scores Applied

BrokerPlatform and ToolsFees and CostsSafety and RegulationResearch and EducationAsset RangeCustomer SupportOverall
XTB 4.6 4.0 4.7 4.5 4.3 4.2 4.2
Libertex 4.2 4.4
IC Markets 4.6 4.4 4.5 3.8 4.4 4.3
Exness 4.3 4.8 4.5 3.5 4.4 4.4

Data Verification Dates

Each broker is evaluated using real account data. Below are the dates of our most recent evaluations:

XTB: Last evaluated March 12, 2026

Libertex: Last evaluated March 12, 2026

IC Markets: Last evaluated March 12, 2026

Exness: Last evaluated March 12, 2026

Our Broker Reviews

Related Content