Broker comparison
Global Prime vs Robinhood
Global Prime and Robinhood may appeal to different types of traders, so a side-by-side check works better than a single verdict. This page does not declare a winner. Instead, it gives you a verification checklist so you can compare each broker's current documents, confirm the details that matter for your situation, and use the InvestorTrip reviews and comparison tool to organise what you find.
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
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.
Start with regulation and account terms
Before comparing anything else, confirm which regulated entity would actually hold your account with each broker. Brokers often operate multiple entities in different jurisdictions, and the entity you sign up with determines your legal protections, complaint routes and any compensation arrangements. Read the client agreement and legal documents on each broker's own site, and note the entity name and regulator reference so you can verify it against the regulator's public register. Availability of accounts also varies by country of residence, so check that both brokers accept clients where you live before spending time on deeper comparisons.
Key checks: Identify the exact legal entity that would hold your account and its regulator.; Check the regulator's public register to confirm the licence is current.; Confirm each broker accepts residents of your country before comparing further.; Read the client agreement for terms on account closure, inactivity and disputes..
Compare fees, spreads and funding costs
Fee structures change and published summaries go stale quickly, so treat any third-party fee table as a starting point rather than a final answer. Pull the current pricing pages and fee schedules directly from Global Prime and Robinhood, then compare like for like: trading costs on the instruments you actually plan to trade, any commissions or spreads, currency conversion charges, and deposit or withdrawal fees for your funding method. Small differences in conversion or withdrawal costs can matter more than headline trading fees, depending on how often you move money in and out.
Key checks: Download or screenshot each broker's current fee schedule with the date noted.; Compare costs on the specific instruments you intend to trade, not averages.; Check currency conversion charges if your account currency differs from the instrument's.; Confirm deposit and withdrawal fees for the payment methods you would use..
Test platforms, products and support before funding
Product ranges and platform features differ between brokers, and marketing pages do not always reflect what is available to your account type or region. Where a demo account or unfunded account preview is offered, use it to check order types, charting, mobile usability and how the platform behaves during busy market hours. Also confirm that the specific markets you want are actually tradeable from your account, since instrument lists can vary by entity. Finally, test customer support with a real question and note response time and quality, because support matters most when something goes wrong.
Key checks: Verify the instruments you want to trade appear in your account's actual market list.; Use a demo or preview account to test order entry, charts and the mobile app.; Send a support query to each broker and compare response speed and clarity..
Verdict
Neither Global Prime nor Robinhood is the universal choice. The stronger fit depends on your residency, the products you trade, the entity that would hold your account and the costs that apply to your specific usage. Complete the checklist above, read the full Global Prime review and Robinhood review on InvestorTrip, and confirm every material detail in each broker's current documents before deciding.