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

Broker comparison

Swissquote vs Tickmill

Comparing Swissquote and Tickmill is less about picking a universal winner and more about matching each broker's current, verified terms to your own situation. Account conditions differ by country and by the legal entity that onboards you, and published comparisons age quickly. This page walks you through a verification checklist covering costs, regulation and platform fit, so you can gather current facts from both brokers' official documents before you open an account.

Swissquote vs Tickmill cover image

Swissquote

Current broker data

Review
Rating
4.5 / 5
Minimum deposit
$1,000
Regulator labels
FINMA
Markets listed
Forex, Commodities, Share CFDs, Indices, Bonds +1
Editorial status
No current notice

Tickmill

Current broker data

Review
Rating
4.4 / 5
Minimum deposit
$100
Regulator labels
CySE, FSA, FCA, DFSA UAE +3
Markets listed
Forex, Commodities, Share CFDs, ETFs, Indices +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: Pull current fee schedules from both brokers

The only reliable source for pricing is each broker's own current fee schedule. Third-party figures, including those on comparison sites, can lag behind changes to spreads, commissions and financing rates. Download or view the live pricing pages for Swissquote and Tickmill and compare the same instrument, the same account type and the same position size. Also review costs that are easy to overlook, since these can outweigh headline spreads depending on how often and how long you trade.

Key checks: Compare total cost per trade for your typical instruments, including spread plus any commission.; Check overnight swap or financing rates if you hold positions beyond a day.; Review deposit, withdrawal, currency conversion and inactivity fees in the official schedules.; Note the account tier each quoted price applies to, since tiers can carry different pricing..

Step 2: Verify the regulatory entity and client protections

Broker brands commonly operate several regulated entities, and your protections depend entirely on which entity holds your account. Before signing up with either Swissquote or Tickmill, find the exact legal entity named in the client agreement for your country, then confirm its authorisation on the relevant regulator's public register. Check what that specific entity says about client money segregation, complaint procedures and any negative balance protection, rather than assuming group-wide policies apply to you.

Key checks: Identify the onboarding entity in the account agreement, not just the brand name.; Confirm the entity's status on the regulator's own register before funding.; Read the client money and negative balance protection terms for your specific entity.; Note leverage limits and product restrictions that apply under your entity's regulator..

Step 3: Test platform and account fit against your requirements

Write down your requirements before you look at either broker's marketing: asset classes, order types, charting needs, minimum deposit budget and base currency. Then check each broker's current platform and product pages against that list, and use a demo account where one is offered to test execution and usability. For structured field-by-field notes, open the Swissquote review at /reviews/swissquote and the Tickmill review at /reviews/tickmill, then run both through the compare broker tool at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=swissquote,tickmill.

Key checks: Confirm both brokers currently offer the markets and instruments you trade in your region.; Trial each platform on a demo account if available before depositing real money.; Check minimum deposits, available base currencies and withdrawal terms in the account documents.; Use the InvestorTrip reviews and comparison tool to keep your verification notes organised..

Verdict

No universal winner exists between Swissquote and Tickmill. Your decision should follow from verified facts: the fees your account type would actually incur, the regulatory entity that would supervise you, and whether each platform covers your markets. Read the Swissquote review at /reviews/swissquote and the Tickmill review at /reviews/tickmill, use the compare broker tool at /tools/compare-brokers?brokers=swissquote,tickmill, and confirm current terms with each broker directly before committing money.