Broker comparison
Hantec Markets vs Saxo
Choosing between Hantec Markets and Saxo depends on your account type, the markets you trade, your location and the costs that apply to your specific trading pattern. Rather than crowning a winner, this page gives you a structured checklist to run against each broker's current documents. Broker terms change, and the entity you sign up with can differ by country, so treat every item below as a question to verify directly with Hantec Markets and Saxo before you deposit funds.
Hantec Markets
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.0 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $1,000
- Regulator labels
- VFSC, FCA, ASIC, FSCM
- Markets listed
- Forex, Indices, Commodities, Stocks, Metals +2
- Editorial status
- No current notice
Saxo
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.4 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $2,000
- Regulator labels
- Danish FSA, FCA, MAS, FINMA +3
- Markets listed
- Currencies, Stocks, ETFs, Bonds, Options and Futures +2
- 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 regulation and the legal entity that would hold your account
Brokers often operate multiple legal entities under different regulators, and the entity assigned to you usually depends on your country of residence. Protections such as negative balance rules, complaint procedures and compensation schemes can vary significantly between entities of the same brand. Before comparing anything else, identify exactly which Hantec Markets entity and which Saxo entity would onboard you, then read that entity's client agreement rather than a generic global page.
Key checks: Find the legal entity name and regulator listed in the account opening documents for your country.; Check the regulator's public register to confirm the licence is current and matches the entity name.; Read the client agreement for segregation of client funds and dispute resolution terms.; Note any differences in leverage limits or product access tied to your assigned entity..
Step 2: Compare total trading costs for your actual strategy
Headline spreads and commission figures rarely tell the whole story. The relevant cost comparison depends on what you trade, how often, at what size and whether you hold positions overnight. Pull the current fee schedules from both brokers and model a typical month of your own trading, including non-trading fees such as deposits, withdrawals, currency conversion and inactivity charges. Small per-trade differences compound quickly for active traders, while infrequent traders should weigh account maintenance and inactivity terms more heavily.
Key checks: Request or download the current fee schedule for the specific account type you would open.; Include overnight financing or swap rates if you hold positions past the daily rollover.; Check withdrawal fees, currency conversion charges and any minimum activity requirements.; Compare costs at your usual trade size, not at the sizes used in promotional examples..
Step 3: Test platforms, instruments and support before committing real money
Platform availability, order types, charting tools and the exact instrument list differ between brokers and sometimes between account tiers at the same broker. A demo account is the most reliable way to confirm that the markets you need are actually tradable and that execution behaviour suits your approach. Use our Hantec Markets review and Saxo review to see which fields we have documented for each broker, then use the compare broker tool to work through the two side by side.
Key checks: Open demo accounts at both brokers and confirm the instruments you trade are listed and priced.; Test the order types you rely on, such as stop-loss, take-profit and trailing orders.; Contact support with a real question and note response time and clarity.; Review the internal Hantec Markets and Saxo review pages before making a final decision..
Verdict
Neither Hantec Markets nor Saxo is a universal choice. Shortlist the one whose verified entity, fee schedule and instrument coverage match your own trading pattern, and confirm every detail against current broker documents before funding an account.