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

Broker comparison

Tickmill vs VT Markets

This page is built as a working checklist for readers weighing Tickmill against VT Markets. Rather than declaring a winner, it walks through the checks that matter: current costs for your instruments, the regulated entity that would actually hold your account, and how each platform behaves for your strategy. Broker terms change, so treat every claim you read anywhere, including on review sites, as something to confirm in the broker's own current documents. The full Tickmill review, the VT Markets review, and the compare broker tool on InvestorTrip support each step below.

Tickmill vs VT Markets cover image

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

VT Markets

Current broker data

Review
Rating
4.5 / 5
Minimum deposit
$100
Regulator labels
ASIC, FSCA, FSC
Markets listed
Forex, Shares, Indices, Cryptocurrencies, Commodities +1
Editorial status
Editorial notice

Editorial notice

VT Markets is an authorised representative of Vantage Global Prime Pty Ltd, which holds ASIC license 428901 (issued 21 December 2012). The same licensee also operates the Vantage brand. 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: Build a like-for-like cost comparison

A cost comparison is only useful if both brokers are measured on the same basis. Decide first which instruments and typical trade sizes you will use, then pull the current pricing pages and legal fee schedules from Tickmill and VT Markets directly. For each broker, record how spreads are quoted, whether commissions apply on your chosen account type, and how overnight financing is calculated for the instruments you hold. Then add non-trading costs, which are often overlooked: inactivity fees, deposit and withdrawal charges, and currency conversion when your funding currency differs from the account base currency. Keep the document dates, because fee schedules are updated periodically.

Key checks: Fix your instruments and trade sizes first, then compare both brokers on that exact basis.; Separate trading costs (spreads, commissions, financing) from account costs (inactivity, withdrawals, conversion).; Take figures only from each broker's current published documents and note when they were published..

Step 2: Verify regulation for the entity that applies to you

Broker brands often operate through several legal entities under different regulators, and your country of residence usually determines which one you sign up with. This matters because leverage caps, negative balance policies, complaint procedures and compensation arrangements can differ between entities of the same brand. For both Tickmill and VT Markets, ask which legal entity would open your account, then verify that entity's licence on the relevant regulator's public register yourself. Also read how client money is held for that entity and what the formal complaints route looks like. If a broker's answer is vague, treat that as a data point in your comparison.

Key checks: Confirm which legal entity would onboard you before comparing protections.; Check the licence directly on the regulator's register rather than relying on summaries.; Ask in writing how client funds are segregated and how complaints are handled for your entity..

Step 3: Test platforms, funding and support in practice

Once costs and regulation are documented, test the practical experience. Where demo accounts are offered, run your normal workflow on each platform: place your usual order types, set alerts, and check charting tools against what you use today. Then examine the operational side, which often decides day-to-day satisfaction: how deposits and withdrawals are processed, what verification documents are required, and how long support takes to answer a specific written question. Read the client agreement clauses on execution, slippage and margin closeout for both brokers, since these terms govern what happens when markets move quickly. Log everything in one place, for example with the InvestorTrip compare broker tool.

Key checks: Run your real workflow on a demo where available, not just a quick look at the interface.; Test support with the same specific question at both brokers and compare the answers.; Read execution, slippage and margin-closeout terms in each client agreement before funding..

Verdict

There is no universal winner between Tickmill and VT Markets. The stronger fit for you depends on documented costs for your instruments, the protections attached to the entity that would hold your account, and how each platform performs in your own testing. Complete the checklist, use the full reviews and the compare broker tool on InvestorTrip, and confirm all terms in current broker documents before committing funds.