Broker comparison
Admirals vs Robinhood
Admirals and Robinhood serve different markets and often different types of clients, which makes a direct feature-by-feature ranking misleading. Rather than declaring a winner, this page gives you a verification checklist: confirm which broker is even available in your country, which regulated entity would hold your account, what the full cost picture looks like for the products you want, and how each platform fits your workflow. Cross-reference your findings with the Admirals review and the Robinhood review on InvestorTrip, and use the compare broker tool to line up their fields side by side. Every item must be confirmed against each broker's current official documents.
Admirals
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.3 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $1
- Regulator labels
- CySEC, MiFID II, FCA. ASIC, CIPC
- Markets listed
- Forex, indices, stocks, ETFs, Bonds +1
- Editorial status
- No current notice
Robinhood
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.9 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $0
- Regulator labels
- FINRA, SEC, SIPC
- Markets listed
- Stocks, ETFs, Options, Cryptocurrencies, Fractional Shares
- Editorial status
- No current notice
How to read this comparison
The facts below come from InvestorTrip's current broker database and linked review pages. They are a screening aid, not a claim that a broker is available, cheaper or safer for every country, account type or legal entity.
Step 1: Confirm availability, regulation and account eligibility
Your first check is the most basic one: whether each broker accepts clients in your country at all, and under which legal entity. Regulation, investor protections and available products are defined at the entity level, so identify the specific entity named in the client agreement you would sign, then verify its licence on the relevant regulator's public register yourself. Product ranges can also differ sharply between brokers and between regions, so confirm that the specific instruments you want to trade are actually offered to clients in your jurisdiction before comparing anything else.
Key checks: Check each broker's official site and client agreement for the list of supported countries.; Identify the exact legal entity that would serve you and verify its licence on the regulator's register.; Confirm the instruments you want are available to clients in your region at each broker.; Note the protections that apply to your account type under each entity's terms..
Step 2: Build a like-for-like cost comparison
Because these brokers may offer different product types, comparing costs requires care. Pick the products you would realistically trade, then gather each broker's current published costs for those products: commissions, spreads or markups, financing or margin interest where relevant, currency conversion charges, and account-level fees such as withdrawal or inactivity charges. Payment structures also differ between business models, so read each broker's disclosures on how orders are executed and how the broker earns revenue. Record where you found each figure and the date, since fee pages change.
Key checks: Compare costs only on products both brokers actually offer you, and note where they do not overlap.; Include conversion, financing and account fees, not just headline commission or spread figures.; Read each broker's order execution and revenue disclosures in its official documents.; Date-stamp your notes and re-verify shortly before funding an account..
Step 3: Evaluate platforms, account features and support with a trial run
The practical test is running your own workflow on each platform before committing money. Where a demo or paper environment is available, use it; where it is not, review the broker's own platform documentation and tutorials to check order types, charting, reporting and mobile functionality against your needs. Read the account terms for minimum deposits, base currencies, margin rules and withdrawal processing. Finally, contact support at each broker with a genuine question and note how quickly and clearly they respond. The linked InvestorTrip reviews list the specific fields worth recording for each broker.
Key checks: Test or review each platform's order types, charts and reporting against your actual routine.; Read account terms for deposits, margin rules and withdrawal processing times.; Test each broker's support channels and note response quality in your time zone.; Use the Admirals review, Robinhood review and compare broker tool to organize your findings..
Verdict
Admirals and Robinhood cannot be ranked against each other in the abstract, because availability, product ranges and account terms depend on where you live and what you trade. Work through the checklist above, read both InvestorTrip reviews, use the compare broker tool, and base your decision on details you have personally verified in each broker's current documents.