UltimateBrokerList
2026

How We Rate and Compare Brokers: UltimateBrokerList Methodology 2026

A transparent, data-driven framework built on live account testing, spread monitoring, and editorial independence. No score is influenced by commercial relationships.

Michael Torres
By Michael Torres CFD & Derivatives Expert

Why Methodology Matters for Broker Comparisons

Most broker comparison sites do not publish their scoring criteria. That omission matters. Without a transparent framework, readers cannot assess whether a broker ranked first earned that position through objective analysis or through a paid placement arrangement. UltimateBrokerList operates differently.

The UltimateBrokerList methodology is a structured, eight-category scoring system applied consistently across every broker reviewed on this site. Each category carries a defined percentage weight. Each score is derived from verifiable data points, including live spread captures, regulatory database checks, and timed customer support interactions. No category score is adjusted based on whether a broker has a commercial relationship with this site.

You might wonder: why go to this level of detail? The answer is straightforward. Retail trading carries genuine financial risk. The FCA, CySEC, and ASIC all publish data indicating that a significant proportion of retail CFD traders lose money. Beginners in particular need accurate, unbiased information to make sound decisions about where to deposit their funds. A methodology page that cannot be scrutinized is not a methodology at all.

The framework described below has been applied to all twelve brokers currently featured on UltimateBrokerList, including Libertex, IG Markets, Interactive Brokers, eToro, Exness, Capital.com, AvaTrade, XTB, Admirals, Plus500, XM Group, and FxPro. Scores reflect data collected and verified as of Q1 2026.

The Eight Scoring Categories Explained

The broker comparison criteria used by UltimateBrokerList are organized into eight distinct categories. Each category captures a different dimension of the broker experience. Together, they produce a composite score on a scale of 1.0 to 5.0.

1. Fees and Costs

This category measures the true cost of trading, not just the headline spread. Analysts capture live bid-ask spreads on EUR/USD, gold (XAU/USD), and the S&P 500 index at three distinct times: the London open (08:00 GMT), mid-session (12:00 GMT), and the New York close (21:00 GMT). Overnight financing rates (swap rates), inactivity fees, withdrawal fees, and currency conversion charges are also recorded. A broker advertising zero commission but charging wide spreads will score lower here than one with transparent, competitive all-in costs.

2. Regulation and Safety

Regulatory status is verified directly against official regulator databases: the FCA register, ASIC's professional registers, CySEC's license list, and equivalent bodies for other jurisdictions. The category assesses the tier of regulation (Tier 1 regulators such as FCA and ASIC score higher than offshore licenses from SVG or Vanuatu), the presence of negative balance protection, client fund segregation, and participation in investor compensation schemes. For global traders, the specific entity through which an account is opened matters significantly, as a broker may hold both an FCA license and an offshore license, and the protections differ substantially.

3. Platform Quality

Platform testing covers the web-based interface, desktop application (where available), and the mobile application on both iOS and Android. Testers assess chart loading speed, order execution latency, the availability of drawing tools, and the clarity of the interface for a first-time user. MetaTrader 4 and MetaTrader 5 availability is noted, as is the presence of proprietary platforms. Mobile trading is weighted heavily in this category given that a large proportion of retail traders, particularly in emerging markets, use mobile as their primary interface.

4. Instrument Range

This category counts and categorizes the tradable instruments available: forex pairs, stock CFDs, indices, commodities, cryptocurrencies, ETFs, and bonds. Raw instrument counts are supplemented by an assessment of market access quality. A broker offering 10,000 instruments but with poor liquidity on most of them scores lower than one offering 1,000 instruments with consistently tight spreads and reliable execution.

5. Account Types

Analysts review the full account tier structure, from the entry-level account to professional and VIP tiers. Key data points include minimum deposit requirements, leverage options by account type, whether a demo account is available and for how long, swap-free (Islamic) account availability, and the documentation required to open each account type. For beginners, the availability of a no-expiry demo account and a low minimum deposit are weighted positively.

6. Deposit and Withdrawal

This category records all accepted payment methods (credit and debit cards, bank wire, e-wallets such as Skrill and Neteller, and cryptocurrency where available), the processing time for both deposits and withdrawals, and any associated fees. Currency conversion costs are flagged explicitly. For traders in regions with limited banking infrastructure, the availability of e-wallet and cryptocurrency deposit options is a meaningful differentiator.

7. Customer Support

Support quality is assessed through timed contact attempts via live chat, email, and telephone. Response times are recorded. The accuracy and completeness of answers to a standardized set of ten questions (covering account opening, fee structure, regulatory status, and platform features) are scored on a rubric. Availability hours and the languages supported are also recorded.

8. Educational Resources

The educational content library is assessed for breadth, depth, and accessibility. Analysts count and categorize available resources: video tutorials, written guides, webinars, trading glossaries, and structured learning paths. The quality of beginner-oriented content receives particular weight, as this site serves a primarily beginner audience. Brokers that provide a clear, progressive learning path from account opening through to executing a first live trade score highest in this category.

Overall Rating

Based on our analysis

4.3
Fees and Costs 4.5
Regulation and Safety 4.8
Platform Quality 4.3
Instrument Range 4.0
Account Types 4.2
Deposit and Withdrawal 4.1
Customer Support 4.0
Educational Resources 4.3

How Each Category Is Weighted in the Final Score

The composite score is not a simple average of the eight category scores. Each category is assigned a percentage weight that reflects its practical significance to the typical retail trader. The weighting structure is reviewed annually and was last updated in January 2026.

  • Fees and Costs: 25% - The single largest weight, because trading costs compound over time and directly reduce returns. A difference of 0.3 pips on EUR/USD across 100 trades per month represents a meaningful real-money difference.
  • Regulation and Safety: 20% - The second largest weight, because the safety of deposited funds is non-negotiable. A broker with competitive fees but weak regulatory oversight does not represent a sound choice for any trader.
  • Platform Quality: 15% - Platform reliability and usability directly affect a trader's ability to execute strategy. Execution failures and poor mobile interfaces are documented and penalized.
  • Instrument Range: 10% - Breadth of market access matters, though quality is prioritized over raw count.
  • Account Types: 10% - Demo account availability and low minimum deposits are particularly relevant for beginners building confidence before committing capital.
  • Deposit and Withdrawal: 10% - Processing delays and hidden conversion fees are a common source of trader frustration and are scored accordingly.
  • Customer Support: 5% - Support quality matters most when something goes wrong. The lower weight reflects that most day-to-day trading does not require support interaction.
  • Educational Resources: 5% - Valued highly for beginners but less relevant to experienced traders, hence the lower overall weight in the composite score.

These weights are applied uniformly across all brokers. A broker cannot receive a higher composite score by excelling in low-weight categories while performing poorly in high-weight ones. The structure is designed to reward brokers that deliver value where it matters most to traders.

The UltimateBrokerList Data Collection and Verification Process

1

Regulatory Database Verification

Every broker's regulatory status is verified directly against the official public registers of the relevant authority: the FCA Financial Services Register, ASIC's professional registers, CySEC's licensed investment firms list, and equivalent databases for other jurisdictions. The specific regulated entity, license number, and scope of authorization are recorded. This step is repeated at each review cycle.

2

Live Spread Monitoring

Analysts open live trading accounts and capture bid-ask spreads on a standardized basket of instruments (EUR/USD, XAU/USD, US30, Bitcoin/USD) at three fixed times per trading day across a minimum five-day monitoring window. Average and minimum spreads are calculated from this data. Broker-published spread figures are compared against observed figures and discrepancies are noted in the review.

3

Platform and Mobile App Testing

Each broker's web platform, desktop application, and mobile app (iOS and Android) are tested using a standardized checklist covering account navigation, chart functionality, order placement, and error handling. Mobile testing is conducted on both mid-range and high-end devices to assess performance across hardware tiers.

4

Account Opening Walkthrough

A full account opening process is completed for each broker, recording the time required, the documentation requested, the identity verification method used, and any friction points encountered. Demo account availability and virtual balance are confirmed directly.

5

Deposit and Withdrawal Testing

Deposit methods are tested where feasible, and withdrawal processing times are recorded from submission to fund receipt. Any fees charged at the withdrawal stage are documented. Currency conversion rates applied by the broker are compared against mid-market rates to quantify conversion costs.

6

Customer Support Assessment

Live chat, email, and telephone support channels are contacted during business hours using a standardized set of ten questions. Response times are recorded to the minute. Answers are scored on a rubric assessing accuracy, completeness, and clarity. This process is repeated at least twice per review cycle to account for variability.

7

Educational Content Audit

The full educational content library is catalogued by type (video, article, webinar, glossary, course) and assessed for beginner accessibility. The presence of a structured learning path from basic concepts through to live trading is noted and scored positively.

8

Score Calculation and Peer Review

Individual category scores are calculated using the defined rubrics and weighted to produce the composite score. Before publication, each review is peer-reviewed by a second analyst who checks data accuracy, score consistency, and compliance with editorial standards. Discrepancies are resolved through a third-party review.

Live Account Testing: What It Involves and Why It Matters

Published broker specifications are marketing materials. Live account testing is the only reliable method for verifying what traders actually experience. The UltimateBrokerList unbiased broker review process requires that every broker reviewed on this site has been tested through a live or demo account opened by an analyst, not simply described from publicly available documentation.

Spread Monitoring in Practice

Spread monitoring reveals meaningful differences between brokers that are not apparent from their published figures. Testing reveals that several brokers widen spreads significantly during the first 15 minutes of the London open, a period when many retail traders are most active. Brokers that maintain consistent spreads during this window score higher in the fees category than those whose spreads widen by 50% or more.

Execution Quality

Order execution is tested by placing market orders and recording the time between order submission and fill confirmation, as well as any slippage between the quoted price and the filled price. Consistent positive slippage (fills better than quoted) is noted as a positive indicator. Consistent negative slippage is penalized.

Mobile Platform Testing

Mobile testing is conducted on both iOS and Android devices. Analysts assess whether the mobile app provides full trading functionality or a reduced feature set, how quickly charts load on a standard 4G connection, and whether order placement requires more than three taps from the home screen. For beginners who may trade primarily from a smartphone, these details are not trivial.

Demo Account Evaluation

Demo accounts are opened and used for a minimum of five trading days. The virtual balance, the range of instruments available in demo mode, and whether the demo environment accurately reflects live trading conditions (including realistic spreads) are all assessed. Brokers that offer unlimited demo accounts with realistic conditions score higher in the account types category.

Commercial Relationships and Editorial Independence

UltimateBrokerList earns revenue through affiliate partnerships with some of the brokers featured on this site. This is a standard practice in financial media and does not, by itself, compromise editorial integrity. What matters is whether commercial relationships influence scores or rankings. At UltimateBrokerList, they do not.

How Commercial Relationships Work

When a reader clicks a link to a broker and opens an account, UltimateBrokerList may receive a referral fee from that broker. The existence of such a relationship is disclosed on every page where it is relevant. Brokers pay the same referral rates regardless of their position in any ranking or comparison table on this site.

What Commercial Relationships Do Not Affect

  • Category scores in any of the eight scoring dimensions
  • The composite rating assigned to any broker
  • The written assessment of a broker's strengths and weaknesses
  • The decision to include or exclude a broker from a comparison
  • The order in which brokers appear in ranked lists (which reflects composite scores, not commercial arrangements)

Verification of Independence

The scoring rubrics and data collection protocols described on this page are applied identically to all brokers, regardless of commercial status. A broker with a high affiliate commission rate but weak regulatory oversight will score lower in the regulation category than a broker with no commercial relationship but strong regulatory credentials. The scores in the table below reflect this principle directly.

Readers who believe a score is inaccurate or inconsistent with the methodology described here are encouraged to contact the editorial team. All substantive challenges to published scores are reviewed and, where warranted, result in score revisions with a published correction notice.

Broker Scores at a Glance: How Featured Brokers Performed

The table below presents the composite scores assigned to all twelve brokers currently featured on UltimateBrokerList, based on data collected in Q1 2026. Scores reflect the weighted average of all eight categories. Minimum deposit figures are taken directly from broker documentation and verified through account opening testing.

BrokerComposite ScoreMinimum Deposit
IG Markets4.6 / 5.0$0
Interactive Brokers4.5 / 5.0$0
eToro4.5 / 5.0$50
Libertex4.4 / 5.0$100
Exness4.4 / 5.0$10
Capital.com4.4 / 5.0$20
AvaTrade4.3 / 5.0$100
XTB4.2 / 5.0Not specified
Admirals4.2 / 5.0$100
Plus5004.2 / 5.0$100
XM Group4.2 / 5.0$5
FxPro4.2 / 5.0$100

Scores are composite weighted averages based on Q1 2026 data. Minimum deposit figures reflect standard account conditions and may vary by region, payment method, or account type. Always verify current terms directly with the broker before opening an account.

How Often Reviews Are Updated

Broker conditions change. Spreads widen or tighten. Regulatory licenses are granted or revoked. Platforms are redesigned. A review published 18 months ago may be materially inaccurate today. The UltimateBrokerList update policy is designed to keep published data current and actionable.

Standard Review Cycle

Every broker featured on this site undergoes a full review cycle at least once every 12 months. The full cycle includes repeat live spread monitoring, regulatory status re-verification, platform re-testing, and a fresh customer support assessment. The review date is published at the top of each broker review page so readers can assess the recency of the data.

Triggered Updates

Certain events trigger an immediate out-of-cycle review regardless of when the last full cycle occurred:

  • A change in the broker's regulatory status (new license, license suspension, or revocation)
  • A significant change to the fee structure (spread changes of 20% or more, introduction of new fees)
  • A major platform update or migration (for example, a broker discontinuing MetaTrader 4 support)
  • A change in minimum deposit requirements
  • Reader-reported discrepancies between published data and observed conditions

Partial Updates

Between full review cycles, analysts monitor broker announcements and regulatory filings for material changes. Where a single data point changes (for example, a broker reduces its minimum deposit from $100 to $50), that specific data point is updated without triggering a full review cycle. Partial updates are timestamped and noted in the review.

The goal is straightforward: every data point on this site should be accurate on the day a reader consults it. That standard cannot always be achieved perfectly, but the processes described above represent a genuine commitment to minimizing the gap between published data and current reality.

Our Editorial Commitments

Regulatory Verification

All regulatory claims verified against FCA, ASIC, and CySEC official databases

Live Data Testing

Spreads monitored via live accounts, not broker-supplied marketing figures

Editorial Independence

Commercial relationships disclosed; no score is influenced by affiliate arrangements

Annual Review Cycle

Every broker review updated at least once per 12 months, with triggered updates for material changes

Peer Review Process

All scores reviewed by a second analyst before publication

Frequently Asked Questions About the UltimateBrokerList Methodology

How does UltimateBrokerList calculate broker ratings?
UltimateBrokerList calculates broker ratings using a weighted average of eight scoring categories: fees and costs (25%), regulation and safety (20%), platform quality (15%), instrument range (10%), account types (10%), deposit and withdrawal (10%), customer support (5%), and educational resources (5%). Each category score is derived from verifiable data points collected through live account testing, regulatory database checks, and standardized analyst assessments. The composite score is expressed on a scale of 1.0 to 5.0.
Does UltimateBrokerList accept payment to improve a broker's rating?
No. UltimateBrokerList does earn referral fees when readers open accounts through links on this site, which is standard practice in financial media. However, these commercial arrangements have no effect on category scores, composite ratings, or written assessments. The scoring rubrics are applied identically to all brokers regardless of whether a commercial relationship exists. This commitment is described in full in the Editorial Independence section of this page.
How are broker spreads measured for the fees and costs category?
Spreads are measured through live or demo trading accounts opened by UltimateBrokerList analysts. Bid-ask spreads on a standardized basket of instruments (EUR/USD, XAU/USD, US30, and Bitcoin/USD) are captured at three fixed times per day across a minimum five-day monitoring window. Average and minimum spreads are calculated from this data and compared against broker-published figures. Discrepancies between observed and published spreads are noted in the review.
How often are broker reviews updated on UltimateBrokerList?
Every broker featured on UltimateBrokerList undergoes a full review cycle at least once every 12 months. Out-of-cycle triggered updates occur when a broker changes its regulatory status, significantly alters its fee structure, undergoes a major platform update, or changes its minimum deposit requirements. Individual data points are updated between full review cycles when material changes are identified. The review date is published on each broker review page.
What does the regulation and safety category measure?
The regulation and safety category assesses the tier of regulatory oversight under which a broker operates, verified directly against official regulator databases such as the FCA Financial Services Register, ASIC's professional registers, and CySEC's licensed investment firms list. It also evaluates the presence of negative balance protection, client fund segregation practices, and participation in investor compensation schemes. Tier 1 regulators (FCA, ASIC, CySEC) score higher than offshore licenses from jurisdictions such as SVG or Vanuatu.
Why is the fees and costs category weighted at 25%, the highest of all eight categories?
Fees and costs receive the highest weight because trading costs compound over time and directly reduce a trader's net returns. A difference of even 0.3 pips on EUR/USD, repeated across 100 trades per month, represents a material real-money difference over a year of trading. This category captures not only spreads but also overnight financing rates, inactivity fees, withdrawal fees, and currency conversion charges, all of which affect the true cost of trading with a given broker.
How is educational content assessed for beginner traders?
The educational resources category audits the full content library of each broker, cataloguing resources by type (video tutorials, written guides, webinars, glossaries, and structured courses) and assessing their accessibility for traders with no prior experience. Brokers that provide a clear, progressive learning path from basic concepts through to executing a first live trade score highest. The presence of a trading glossary, beginner-oriented video series, and regularly updated webinars are all scored positively.
Which broker currently holds the highest rating on UltimateBrokerList?
As of Q1 2026, IG Markets holds the highest composite rating of 4.6 out of 5.0, based on the weighted eight-category scoring framework. Interactive Brokers and eToro both hold ratings of 4.5. Libertex, Exness, and Capital.com each hold ratings of 4.4. All ratings are subject to revision at the next review cycle or upon a triggered update event.

Broker Scores Applied

BrokerPlatform and ToolsSocial and Copy TradingFees and CostsSafety and RegulationResearch and EducationCustomer SupportAsset RangeOverall
eToro 4.5 4.8 3.8 4.7 4.3 3.9 4.4 4.5
Libertex 4.7 4.3 3.8 3.9 4.4
IG Markets 4.5 4.6
Interactive Brokers 4.5

Data Verification Dates

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

eToro: Last evaluated March 13, 2026

Libertex: Last evaluated March 13, 2026

IG Markets: Last evaluated March 13, 2026

Interactive Brokers: Last evaluated March 13, 2026

Our Broker Reviews

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