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

Broker comparison

Capital.com vs FxPro

This page does not crown a winner between Capital Com and Fxpro. Instead, it gives you a structured checklist for comparing the two brokers yourself, because the details that matter most, such as costs, account terms and regulatory coverage, depend on your country, account type and trading style. Fee schedules and product terms change over time, so treat this page as a workflow, not a verdict. Before opening an account with either broker, read the current legal documents and cost disclosures published on each broker's own site, and cross-check them against the Capital Com review and the Fxpro review on InvestorTrip.

Capital.com vs FxPro cover image

Capital.com

Current broker data

Review
Rating
4.7 / 5
Minimum deposit
$20
Regulator labels
FCA, CySEC, FSA, SCB +1
Markets listed
Forex, Commodities, Share CFDs, Indices, ETFs
Editorial status
No current notice

FxPro

Current broker data

Review
Rating
4.8 / 5
Minimum deposit
$100
Regulator labels
FCA, CySEC, FSCA, SCB +1
Markets listed
Forex, CFDs on Indices, CFDs on Energies, CFDs on Metals, Shares +1
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: Verify fees and trading costs for your instruments

Headline cost claims rarely tell the full story. What you actually pay depends on the instruments you trade, the account type you open and how long you hold positions. For both Capital Com and Fxpro, pull up the current fee schedule from each broker's official documents and calculate the total cost of a typical trade you would place. Include spreads, any commissions, overnight financing charges and currency conversion costs if you deposit in a currency different from the account base currency. Also check non-trading fees such as inactivity charges and withdrawal costs, since these can matter more than spreads for occasional traders.

Key checks: Compare spreads and commissions on the exact instruments you plan to trade, not on marketing examples.; Check overnight financing rates if you hold leveraged positions for more than a day.; Review non-trading fees: inactivity, deposits, withdrawals and currency conversion.; Note the date on each fee document, since schedules are updated periodically..

Step 2: Compare platforms, account types and order handling

Platform preference is personal, so test before committing money. Check which platforms each broker currently supports for your region, whether a demo account is available, and how orders are executed under the account type you would open. Brokers often run several account tiers with different pricing models, so the comparison only makes sense if you match like-for-like account types. Look at minimum deposit requirements, available base currencies and whether the tools you rely on, such as charting, alerts or automated trading, are supported on the account you would actually use.

Key checks: Open demo accounts at both brokers and test the platforms with your usual workflow.; Match account types like-for-like before comparing pricing between the two brokers.; Confirm minimum deposits, base currencies and funding methods for your country.; Check the interactive comparison at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=capital-com,fxpro to line up review fields side by side..

Step 3: Confirm regulation, entity and client protections

Multi-entity brokers register different legal entities in different jurisdictions, and the entity that onboards you determines your leverage limits, negative balance protection, complaint routes and any compensation scheme eligibility. Before funding an account with Capital Com or Fxpro, identify exactly which legal entity would hold your account, then verify that entity's authorisation directly on the relevant regulator's public register. Read the client agreement to understand how client money is held and what happens in a dispute. Do not rely on third-party summaries, including this page, as the final word on regulatory status.

Key checks: Identify the specific legal entity that would onboard you based on your country of residence.; Verify that entity's licence number on the regulator's own public register.; Read the client agreement sections on client money handling and dispute resolution.; Check whether negative balance protection applies to your account type and entity..

Verdict

There is no universal winner between Capital Com and Fxpro. Both should be assessed against your own instruments, account type and jurisdiction. Use this checklist, the full InvestorTrip reviews of each broker and the compare broker tool, then confirm every fee, platform and regulatory detail directly in each broker's current documents before deciding.