Broker comparison
Tickmill vs Vantage
Comparing Tickmill and Vantage is less about picking a universal winner and more about matching each broker's current terms to your own trading plan. Broker conditions change over time, so this page works as a verification checklist rather than a fixed scorecard. Use it alongside the full Tickmill review, the Vantage review, and the compare broker tool on InvestorTrip, then confirm every detail directly in each broker's own documents before opening or funding an account.
Tickmill
Current broker data
- 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
Vantage
Current broker data
- Rating
- 4.6 / 5
- Minimum deposit
- $50
- Regulator labels
- ASIC, FCA, FSCA, CIMA +1
- Markets listed
- Forex, Commodities, Share CFDs, Indices, Futures +2
- Editorial status
- Editorial notice
Editorial notice
Vantage and VT Markets both operate under ASIC license 428901, held by Vantage Global Prime Pty Ltd (issued 21 December 2012). VT Markets is an authorised representative of that licensee. These two brokers are corporate-linked under shared regulatory coverage rather than independent alternatives.
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 costs and account terms for your instruments
Headline pricing rarely tells the whole story. The costs that matter are the ones attached to the specific instruments, account type and trade sizes you actually plan to use. Before comparing Tickmill and Vantage on cost, pull the current fee schedule and account terms from each broker's own website and legal documents. Check how spreads, commissions and overnight financing are quoted for your instruments, and note any account-level charges such as inactivity fees, deposit or withdrawal costs, and currency conversion charges. Write these down side by side for both brokers so you are comparing like with like, and confirm the date of each document you read.
Key checks: Compare spreads and commissions only for the account type and instruments you intend to trade.; Check overnight financing (swap) methodology and how it applies to positions held over weekends.; Look for non-trading costs: inactivity fees, withdrawal charges and currency conversion.; Record the date of each fee document, since terms can change without a page redesign..
Step 2: Confirm which regulated entity would hold your account
Multi-entity brokers commonly operate under several regulators, and the entity that onboards you depends on your country of residence. Protections, complaint routes, leverage caps and compensation arrangements can differ meaningfully between entities of the same brand. For both Tickmill and Vantage, identify exactly which legal entity would hold your account, then verify that entity's licence number directly on the relevant regulator's public register. Do not rely on marketing pages or third-party summaries, including this one, for regulatory status. If anything is unclear, ask each broker's support team in writing which entity applies to you and what client-money and complaint arrangements come with it.
Key checks: Identify the exact legal entity that would open your account based on your residence.; Verify licence numbers on the regulator's own public register, not on marketing pages.; Ask in writing about client-money segregation and any compensation scheme that applies to your entity..
Step 3: Test platforms, execution and support before funding
Feature lists cannot tell you how a platform feels for your workflow. Where a demo account is available, test each broker's platform with the order types, chart tools and instruments you rely on. Check how orders behave around news events on the demo, keeping in mind that demo fill quality may differ from live conditions. Contact support at both brokers with a specific question, such as withdrawal processing steps, and note response speed and clarity. Finally, read the client agreement sections on order execution, slippage and margin calls, because these define what happens in stressed markets. Use the InvestorTrip compare broker tool to keep your findings organised as you work through both brokers.
Key checks: Open demo accounts where offered and test your actual order types and chart setup.; Send the same support question to both brokers and compare the quality of the answers.; Read execution, slippage and margin-call clauses in the client agreement before funding..
Verdict
Neither Tickmill nor Vantage is a universal choice. Use this checklist to compare current fees, the regulated entity that would hold your account, and platform behaviour for your own strategy, then confirm every point in each broker's current documents. The full Tickmill and Vantage reviews and the InvestorTrip compare broker tool can help you organise that verification work.