Broker comparison
FXCM vs Global Prime
Comparing FXCM and Global Prime is only useful if the details you compare are current and apply to your account. This page provides a structured checklist covering costs, regulation, platforms and account terms, together with the verification steps you should complete on each broker's own website. Treat any third-party figures, including those in reviews, as prompts for your own checks rather than confirmed facts, since broker conditions change and differ by region.
FXCM
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.1 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $50
- Regulator labels
- FCA, ASIC, FSCA
- Markets listed
- Forex, Commodities, Stocks, Indices, Metals +2
- 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.
Define what you are comparing before you compare
Start by writing down your requirements: which markets you trade, your typical position size, whether you hold overnight, and which platform features you rely on. Then read the full FXCM review at /reviews/fxcm and the Global Prime review at /reviews/global-prime to see how each broker's documented fields line up against your list. The workflow at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=fxcm,global-prime helps you view the same fields side by side, but every item still needs confirmation from the brokers' official pages.
Key checks: List your must-have requirements before looking at either broker's marketing.; Match account types that genuinely correspond to each other, not headline offers.; Confirm each field on both brokers' official sites on the same day for a fair comparison..
Cost checklist: what to confirm in the fee schedules
Locate the current fee schedule or pricing page for each broker and work through it methodically. For your main instruments, note the typical spread and any commission for the account type you would open, then check swap rates if you hold positions overnight. Add non-trading costs such as withdrawal fees, currency conversion charges and inactivity fees. Estimate the total cost of a typical trade at each broker rather than comparing individual line items in isolation.
Key checks: Confirm spread and commission for your exact account type and main instruments.; Check overnight swap or financing charges from the current published rates.; Review withdrawal, conversion and inactivity fees in each fee schedule.; Note minimum deposits, funding methods and base currencies available in your region..
Regulation, entity and platform verification steps
Confirm which legal entity of each broker would open your account, since this depends on your country of residence and determines your regulator, leverage limits and any client protections. Verify the entity's licence number on the regulator's own public register. Then confirm the platforms, order types and execution arrangements available on your account type by reading the account terms, not just the platform marketing pages. Keep copies of the documents you relied on so you can spot changes later.
Key checks: Identify the contracting entity named in the client agreement for your region.; Verify licences directly on the relevant regulator's public register.; Confirm platform availability, order types and execution policy for your account type.; Save dated copies of fee schedules and terms you used in your decision..
Verdict
This comparison does not produce a single winner between FXCM and Global Prime, because the meaningful differences depend on your account type, region and trading approach. Traders should calculate the full cost of a typical trade at both brokers using current fee schedules, confirm the regulated entity that would hold their account, and check platform and execution terms for that entity. Only commit funds after completing these verification steps against official broker documents.