Capital.com and Forex.com duel as two regulation-heavy brokers with different cost models and platform options. The axis of tension centers on pricing, access, and ownership features.
Capital.com and Forex.com are closely matched overall, but Capital.com's commission-free share CFDs mark the clearest cost-oriented differentiator.
Find out which stock broker best suits your investing profile.
Choose Capital.com if…
Choose Capital.com if you want commission-free share CFDs and a stock screener.
Choose Forex.com if…
Choose Forex.com if you need phone support and MT4/MT5 share CFDs from a single account.
Which broker wins for each type of stock trader, based on costs, safety, features, and editorial scoring.
Capital.com wins for low-cost trading because share CFDs are commission-free.
| Editorial score | 3.9/ 5 | 3.9/ 5 |
|---|---|---|
| Min deposit | $20▼ lower | $100 |
| Spreads from | 0.6 pips▼ lower | 1 pips |
| Commission / lot | N/A | $7/lot |
A closer look at the specific criteria each broker meets or misses within each scoring category.
| Criteria | Capital.com | Forex.com |
|---|---|---|
| Trust & Regulation | ||
| Top-tier regulator (FCA, ASIC, SEC, etc.) | Pass | Pass |
| Segregated client funds | Pass | Pass |
| Negative balance protection | Pass | Pass |
| Compensation scheme (e.g. FSCS, SIPC) | Pass | Pass |
| Costs | ||
| Commission-free trading | Pass | Fail |
| Features | ||
| Fractional shares | Fail | Fail |
| Dividend reinvestment (DRIP) | Fail | Fail |
| Extended hours trading | Fail | Fail |
| IPO access | Fail | Fail |
| Short selling | Pass | Pass |
| Stock screener tool | Pass | Fail |
| Support | ||
| Mobile app | Pass | Pass |
| Advanced charting tools | Pass | Pass |
| 24/5 live chat | Pass | Pass |
| Phone support | Fail | Pass |
Capital.com and Forex.com share the same editorial score of 3.9/5. One concrete differentiator: Capital.com requires a lower minimum deposit.
Capital.com lists tighter spreads from 0.6, compared with Forex.com's 1. For stock trading, also factor in any per-trade or per-share commissions — spreads and commissions together determine the true cost per trade.
Capital.com has $20, while Forex.com requires at least $100. This makes Capital.com more accessible for traders with limited starting capital.
Both Capital.com and Forex.com hold licences from top-tier regulators, indicating a high standard of regulatory oversight. Check each broker's specific regulatory bodies to confirm coverage in your jurisdiction.
For beginners, two factors stand out: Capital.com requires a lower minimum deposit ($20), lowering the barrier to entry, and both brokers provide negative balance protection. Also compare demo account availability and educational resources before deciding.
Capital.com lists maximum leverage of 20:1, while Forex.com lists up to 20:1. Available leverage depends on your jurisdiction. EU retail clients under ESMA rules are capped at 1:30 on major forex pairs.
Forex.com charges $7 per trade on commission-based accounts. Commission details for Capital.com are not currently available. Check their website for up-to-date pricing. Stock commissions may be charged as a flat rate per trade or per share; confirm the exact structure on each broker's website.
Capital.com supports Proprietary Web/Mobile, while Forex.com supports MetaTrader 5, Proprietary Web/Mobile, MetaTrader 4. Both provide Proprietary Web/Mobile. Forex.com has exclusive access to MetaTrader 5 and MetaTrader 4.
Capital.com offers commission-free stock trading while Forex.com does not according to our data. Commission-free trading can reduce costs for frequent traders. Always confirm the current fee structure directly on each broker's website.
Both Capital.com and Forex.com are covered by a compensation scheme according to our data, providing an additional safety net for your stock investments. Confirm the specific scheme and coverage limit that applies to your account before depositing.
Forex.com wins for safety and regulation due to NFA/CFTC and IIROC oversight.
Capital.com wins for active traders with broader stock CFD coverage and AI trading insights.
Capital.com wins for beginners thanks to a low $20 minimum deposit.
Capital.com wins global access with 25 exchanges versus eight for Forex.com.
Equally matched; neither offers fractional shares or dividend reinvestment.
| N/A |
| 1.7 pips |
| Inactivity fee | $10/month (after 3 months)▼ lower | $15/month (after 12 months) |
|---|
| Deposit fee | Free | Free |
|---|
| Deposit methods | Bank transferCredit cardDebit cardSkrillNetellerPayPalApple PayGoogle Pay | Bank transferCredit cardDebit card |
|---|
| Withdrawal methods | Bank transferCredit cardSkrillNeteller | Bank transferCredit card |
|---|
| Withdrawal fee | Free | Free |
|---|
| Commission-free | Yes | No |
|---|
| Fractional shares | No | No |
|---|
| Dividend reinvestment | No | No |
|---|
| Extended hours | No | No |
|---|
| IPO access | No | No |
|---|
| Short selling | Yes | Yes |
|---|
| Regulators | FCA ASIC MAS CySEC CMA | FCA ASIC MAS IIROC CFTC NFA |
|---|
| Platforms | Proprietary Web/Mobile | MetaTrader 5 Proprietary Web/Mobile MetaTrader 4 |
|---|
Dig deeper into each broker’s features, fees, and regulation.
Score 3.9 / 5
Score 3.9 / 5
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