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

Broker research

Tickmill Forex checklist

Researching forex trading conditions at any broker means checking details that change frequently: spreads, commissions, swap rates, leverage limits and execution terms. This page does not list confirmed Tickmill trading conditions. It sets out the questions to answer from Tickmill's current documents and account pages, so your decision rests on up-to-date primary sources rather than dated summaries.

Tickmill Forex checklist cover image

Check costs from current broker documents

Forex trading costs typically combine spreads, any per-lot commissions, and overnight swap or financing charges. These vary by account type and market conditions, and published figures can change at any time. Before comparing costs, pull the current pricing pages and the account terms directly from Tickmill and note which account type each figure applies to. Averages and minimum spreads are not the same thing, so check how any quoted numbers are defined and whether they reflect typical conditions or brief periods of deep liquidity.

  • Identify spreads, commissions and swap charges for the specific account type you would open.
  • Distinguish minimum spreads from average spreads in any quoted figures.
  • Check for inactivity fees, deposit or withdrawal costs and currency conversion charges.
  • Confirm the date and source of every cost figure you record.

Verify account types, leverage and execution terms

Brokers usually offer several account types with different pricing structures, minimum deposits and platform options, and leverage limits depend on your residence and the regulating entity. Confirm from Tickmill's own materials which account types are available to you, what leverage applies to retail clients in your jurisdiction, and how orders are executed, including the broker's stated policy on slippage, requotes and stop-out levels. The client agreement and any execution policy documents are the authoritative sources, not marketing pages.

  • Confirm which account types and platforms are open to residents of your country.
  • Check retail leverage caps and margin close-out rules for your jurisdiction.
  • Read the order execution policy for slippage and stop-out details.

Test before you commit and keep records

A sensible research process ends with practical testing rather than assumptions. If a demo is available, use it to learn the platform and observe pricing behaviour, while remembering that demo conditions may differ from live execution. If you proceed to a live account, consider starting with a small deposit and small position sizes while you confirm withdrawals, support responsiveness and real trading costs match what you researched. For broader context, read our Tickmill review, use the Broker comparison tool to see it alongside other reviewed brokers, and explore the Reviews hub for more research.

  • Use a demo first if available, noting its limits versus live conditions.
  • Start small on a live account and test a withdrawal early.
  • Keep dated records of the terms and costs you verified.

Continue researching

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

FAQ

What are Tickmill's forex spreads and commissions?

We do not publish figures here because pricing changes and differs by account type. Check Tickmill's current pricing pages and account terms directly, note which account each figure applies to, and record the date you checked.

How much leverage can I use for forex with Tickmill?

Leverage depends on your country of residence, your client classification and the regulating entity that onboards you. Confirm the applicable limits in Tickmill's legal documents for your jurisdiction before opening an account.

Is forex trading suitable for beginners?

Forex is a leveraged market where losses can accumulate quickly, and a large share of retail traders lose money. New traders should study risk management, practise on a demo where available, and only ever trade with money they can afford to lose.