Broker comparison
Capital.com vs Global Prime
Comparing Capital Com and Global Prime is not a matter of declaring one broker superior. The details that decide the question for you, including total trading costs, the platforms available in your region and the legal entity that would hold your account, vary by jurisdiction and change over time. This page gives you a repeatable verification process rather than a ranking. Use it alongside the Capital Com review and the Global Prime review on InvestorTrip, and always confirm current terms in each broker's own published documents before you commit any money.
Capital.com
Current broker data
- 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
Global Prime
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.7 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $0
- Regulator labels
- ASIC, VFSC
- Markets listed
- Forex Pairs, CFDs, Cryptocurrencies, Precious/Agricultural Metals and Commodities
- 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: Build a like-for-like cost comparison
A meaningful cost comparison starts with your own trading plan, not with either broker's marketing pages. List the instruments you actually trade, your typical position size and how long you usually hold positions. Then pull the current cost disclosures from both brokers and calculate the full cost of a representative trade at each: spread, any commission per side, overnight financing if you hold beyond the session, and conversion charges if your deposit currency differs from the account base currency. Repeat for a few instruments so a single favourable quote does not skew your view. Record the document dates so you know when to re-check.
Key checks: Model total cost per trade at both brokers using your real position sizes and holding periods.; Include overnight financing and currency conversion, not just spreads and commissions.; Check non-trading fees such as inactivity, deposit and withdrawal charges.; Note the publication date of each fee document and re-verify before funding..
Step 2: Test platforms and confirm account terms
Platform availability and account structures differ by broker and sometimes by region, so verify what you would actually receive rather than assuming. Confirm which trading platforms each broker currently offers to residents of your country, whether demo accounts are available, and which account types you are eligible for. Account tiers can carry different pricing models, minimum deposits and execution arrangements, so any cost comparison must match account types across the two brokers. Test each platform with your normal routine, including chart setups, order types and any automation you depend on, before deciding where your workflow fits better.
Key checks: Confirm platform availability for your country directly with each broker.; Open demo accounts and run your usual analysis and order workflow on both.; Match account tiers before comparing pricing so the numbers are comparable.; Use the tool at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=capital-com,global-prime to line up review data..
Step 3: Verify regulation and client protections yourself
The protections you receive depend on the specific legal entity that opens your account, and brokers with multiple entities route clients according to residence. Before depositing with Capital Com or Global Prime, identify the entity that would onboard you, then verify its authorisation on the relevant regulator's public register rather than trusting summaries. Read the client agreement for how client money is segregated, whether negative balance protection applies to your account, and what your complaint and dispute options are. If anything in the documents is unclear, ask the broker's support team in writing and keep the response.
Key checks: Identify which legal entity would hold your account based on your residence.; Check the entity's licence directly on the regulator's public register.; Read client money and dispute resolution terms in the client agreement.; Confirm in writing whether negative balance protection applies to your account type..
Verdict
Neither Capital Com nor Global Prime is the universal choice. Your decision should rest on a like-for-like cost model, hands-on platform testing and direct verification of the regulated entity that would hold your account. Use the InvestorTrip reviews and the compare broker tool as starting points, then confirm everything against each broker's current documents.