Independent broker research
027Vol. IVJuly 10, 2026
Independent broker research

Broker research

Multibank Group Metatrader checklist

MetaTrader, in its MT4 and MT5 versions, is one of the most widely used third-party trading platforms, but what you actually get depends on the broker behind it: which version is offered, which account types connect to it, which instruments are tradable, and on what execution terms. This page does not confirm Multibank Group's current platform lineup. It gives you a checklist for verifying those details directly before you commit to an account.

Multibank Group Metatrader checklist cover image

Confirm which platform versions and devices are supported

Brokers may offer MT4, MT5, both, or neither, and support can differ between legal entities within the same group. MT4 and MT5 are not interchangeable: they differ in order handling, timeframes, programming language for automated strategies, and available asset classes. Check Multibank Group's official platform pages and confirm with support which versions are offered on the account type you want, and on which devices, before assuming anything.

  • Verify whether MT4, MT5 or both are offered by the specific entity that would hold your account.
  • Check desktop, web and mobile availability if you plan to trade across devices.
  • If you use expert advisors or custom indicators, confirm the version supports them and that automated trading is permitted in the account terms.

Match account types, instruments and execution terms to the platform

The platform is only the interface; the trading conditions come from the broker's account configuration. The same MetaTrader install can show different spreads, commissions, leverage and instrument lists depending on the account type and server you connect to. Request the contract specifications for the instruments you trade and read the order execution policy so you know how orders are filled, whether requotes or slippage rules apply, and what stop-out levels are used.

  • Ask which account types connect to each platform version and how their pricing differs.
  • Review contract specifications for your instruments: lot sizes, margin requirements, trading hours and any swap or holding costs.
  • Read the order execution policy to understand fill methods, slippage handling and margin-call or stop-out levels.
  • Confirm any platform-related fees, such as inactivity charges or data costs, in the official fee schedule.

Test with a demo account before funding

A demo account is the practical way to verify that the platform setup matches what you were told. Open a demo with the same account type you intend to fund, check that the instruments, spreads shown and platform tools match the documentation, and rehearse your order types. Keep in mind demo conditions can differ from live execution, so treat it as a configuration check rather than a performance guarantee. For wider context, see the full review at /reviews/multibank-group, compare platforms across brokers at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=multibank-group, or browse /reviews.

  • Open a demo on the same platform version and account type you plan to use live.
  • Confirm login servers, instrument lists and visible pricing match the broker's published specifications.
  • Remember that demo fills may not reflect live slippage, so verify execution terms in the official policy as well.

Continue researching

Open related InvestorTrip pages before treating this topic as a final decision.

FAQ

Does Multibank Group offer MT4 or MT5?

Confirm this directly on the broker's official platform pages and with support, because platform availability can differ between legal entities and change over time. Ask which versions connect to your intended account type and whether desktop, web and mobile access are all supported.

What is the practical difference between MT4 and MT5?

MT5 generally supports more asset classes, additional timeframes and a different programming language (MQL5) than MT4 (MQL4), so automated strategies are not directly portable between them. Which version suits you depends on the instruments you trade and any tools or expert advisors you rely on.

Will demo conditions on MetaTrader match live trading?

Not necessarily. Demo accounts are useful for checking configuration, instruments and platform features, but live execution can involve slippage, requotes and liquidity effects that demos do not reproduce. Read the broker's order execution policy and consider starting with small live positions.