GO Markets Review 2026
James Barra
James is an experienced broker analyst with a background in financial services. He has spent 2,500+ hours testing brokers, used 35+ different platforms and apps, audited 120+ broker T&Cs, and verified 300+ regulatory licenses.
James Barra Profile PageTobias Robinson
Tobias is committed to helping traders find the right brokerage for their needs. He has tested 200+ brokers, spent 2,600+ hours using different platforms, and placed 2,100+ trades.
Tobias Robinson Profile PageWilliam Berg
William Berg combines his expertise in law and finance to analyze trading brokers. He has checked 3,250+ regulatory licenses, investigated 2,365+ broker clones and trading scams, and placed 3,500+ trades.
William Berg Profile PageApril 8, 2026
Why Trade With GO Markets?
"GO Markets is ideal for active CFD traders who value low spreads, clear pricing, and quick execution on strong charting platforms like MT4, MT5, cTrader, and recently TradingView. The GO Plus+ account, offering raw spreads from 0.0 pips with low commissions, is especially suitable for scalpers and high-frequency traders."
Detailed Ratings
Quick Facts
Pros
- Support for MT4, MT5, cTrader, and TradingView lets you use top platforms with efficient execution and strong charting tools.
- PAMM accounts and various copy trading services cater to both beginner and advanced traders, while the rebate program rewards high-volume traders aiming to cut costs.
- GO Markets simplifies complex topics and creates a community-style learning space. Its standout educational suite includes courses, webinars, podcasts, and weekly live coaching sessions, making it ideal for new traders.
- GO Markets has expanded by adding over 1000 new stock CFDs in 2024 and introducing local payment solutions for traders in Latin America in 2025, such as Pago Efectivo in Peru and Paynet in Mexico.
Cons
- GO Markets' research tools are quite basic and do not offer the frequent insights, analyst commentary, and advanced forecasting tools provided by larger competitors.
- GO Markets depends solely on third-party platforms and lacks a proprietary charting platform, which could restrict innovation or customized features for advanced traders.
- In testing, we discovered that GO Markets limits TradingView access in demo mode until you register a live account. This contrasts with firms that offer full platform access in demo mode from the start.
- Although there is decent multi-asset coverage, our tests found limited options in commodities and indices, with only about 15 indices and 10 commodities available.
Regulation & Trust
GO Markets launched in Melbourne in 2006 and has been around long enough to build a credible record in online trading. It is not an unknown offshore brand, but the level of protection you get depends heavily on which legal entity takes your account.
The group operates through several regulated subsidiaries, and that distinction matters. The rules on leverage, client money protection, compensation schemes, and dispute handling are not the same across jurisdictions. In practical terms, GO Markets looks materially safer under its stronger licenses than under its offshore entities.
Client funds are held in segregated accounts and the broker follows standard compliance procedures around identity verification and account monitoring. That is a useful baseline, but traders should not assume every GO Markets entity offers the same safeguards simply because the branding is identical.
One important point: GO Markets no longer has an active UK FCA license. Its UK authorization was revoked in February 2023, so British traders especially should not assume FCA-level protections apply.
Also, in 2019/2020, GO Markets expanded into the MENA region. They are members of the Dubai Gold & Commodities Exchange (DGCX) and are operating under the newly transitioned Capital Market Authority (CMA) framework in the UAE (which replaced the SCA in January 2026).
Regulatory Entities and Safeguards
GO Markets Pty Ltd (ASIC)
- Regulator: Australian Securities & Investments Commission, license number 254963
- Entity URL: https://www.gomarkets.com/en-au/
- Classification: ‘A’ according to our regulator classification system
- Protections: Segregated client funds, leverage up to 1:30, tighter conduct standards, stronger regulatory scrutiny than offshore entities
- Typical Clients: Australian traders
- What To Know: ASIC is a serious regulator, though it does not run a retail compensation fund in the same way some European jurisdictions do.
GO Markets Ltd (CySEC)
- Regulator: Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission, license number 322/17
- Classification: ‘A’ according to our regulator classification system
- Entity URL: https://www.gomarkets.eu/
- Protections: Investor Compensation Fund coverage up to €20,000 for eligible clients, retail leverage restrictions up to 1:30, negative balance protection
- Typical Clients: Many EEA-based traders
- What To Know: This is one of the stronger entities in the group from a retail client protection standpoint.
GO Markets International Ltd (FSA Seychelles)
- Regulator: Financial Services Authority Seychelles, registration details
- Classification: ‘C’ according to our regulator classification system
- Entity URL: https://www.int.gomarkets.com/
- Protections: Basic licensing oversight, but meaningfully lighter safeguards than ASIC or CySEC
- Typical Clients: International traders outside stricter regulatory regions
- What To Know: This route may offer more flexible trading terms, but it also comes with a weaker safety net.
GO Markets Ltd (Mauritius FSC)
- Regulator: Financial Services Commission Mauritius, license number GB19024896
- Classification: ‘C’ according to our regulator classification system
- Entity URL: https://www.gomarkets.com/
- Protections: Standard offshore supervision, but fewer mandated safeguards than the group’s stronger entities
- Typical Clients: Some international traders
- What To Know: Acceptable as an offshore registration, but not the entity cautious traders should prefer if they have a choice.
GO Markets MENA DMCC (CMA)
- Regulator: Capital Market Authority (CMA) – Formerly SCA
- Entity URL: https://www.gomarkets.ae/ (or redirected via the global portal)
- Classification: ‘B’ according to our regulator classification system
- Protections: Segregated accounts, membership in the Dubai Gold & Commodities Exchange (DGCX), and oversight under the 2026 UAE Federal Decree-Laws.
- Typical Clients: Traders across the UAE and the broader Middle East.
- What To Know: This entity is unique because it provides access to DGCX-listed products. The transition to the CMA framework in 2026 has brought UAE retail protections much closer to ‘category A’ standards (like ASIC).
Regulation & Trust Details
- Regulator: ASIC, CySEC, FSC, FSA
- Guaranteed Stop Loss: No
- Negative Balance Protection: Yes
- Segregated Accounts: Yes
Awards
- Most Trusted Forex Broker APAC 2025 - International Business Magazine
- Best Global Forex Broker 2025 - International Business Magazine
- Best Global Forex Broker, Asia 2024 - World Business Outlook Awards
- Top 100 Trusted Financial Institutions - Middle East 2023 - Middle East Financial Markets Awards
Accounts & Banking
Live Accounts
GO Markets keeps its account structure simple. There are two core retail options rather than an overloaded lineup of near-identical accounts.
The Standard account wraps costs into the spread and is the easier option for traders who want uncomplicated pricing. In our checks, EUR/USD generally sat around the low 1-pip area in normal market conditions, which is acceptable for casual discretionary trading but not especially sharp.
The GO Plus+ account is the more compelling option for active traders. It uses raw-style spreads plus commission, and in our last tests the all-in round-turn cost on major FX pairs landed around the level serious CFD traders would expect from a competitive MetaTrader or cTrader broker. For scalpers and high-frequency discretionary traders, this is the more sensible account.
In 2026, GO Markets also introduced a Micro account in some regions. It features a $10 minimum deposit and allows for smaller contract sizes, designed specifically for beginners.
GO Markets also does not charge an inactivity fee, which remains a worthwhile positive because some brokers still penalize dormant accounts. However, traders under the CySEC entity should note a €15 fee applies after three months of dormancy.

Account Setup
Demo Accounts
The demo setup was quick in our testing and came loaded with virtual funds in a selection of base currencies. It gives access to the main trading environment without immediately pushing you into a live deposit.
The main drawback is the time limit. The standard demo is not especially long-lasting, which makes it less useful for traders who want to test ideas over several market cycles. That puts GO Markets behind brokers that offer indefinite or easily renewable practice accounts.
Deposits & Withdrawals
Funding our account was straightforward. GO Markets supports bank transfers, cards, and a range of e-wallet and local payment methods, with no internal deposit fee in the cases we checked. It has also expanded local payment coverage in parts of Latin America, which should make account funding easier for traders in those regions.
There is no formal minimum deposit, which lowers the barrier to entry. That said, some entities suggest a $200 starting point for Standard and Plus accounts to ensure adequate margin for the 1:500 leverage offered in offshore jurisdictions.
Withdrawals were not instant in our experience, but they were processed inside a normal timeframe and we did not encounter unexplained charges from the broker itself. As usual, intermediary or bank fees can still apply, especially on international transfers.
One detail worth checking in advance is currency support. It is broader on some payment methods than others, particularly if you move away from the standard MT4 or MT5 funding routes. That is not unusual, but it can affect conversion costs if you are not careful.
Accounts & Banking Details
- Minimum Deposit: $0
- Account Types: STP, ECN, PAMM
- Payment Methods: Credit Card, Debit Card, Mastercard, Neteller, Skrill, Visa, Wire Transfer
- Account Currencies: USD, EUR, GBP, CAD, AUD, NZD, CHF, HKD, SGD
- Islamic Account: Yes
Assets & Markets
GO Markets covers the main CFD markets most retail traders look for with over 2,000 instruments. The range includes forex, indices, commodities, share CFDs, crypto CFDs, ETFs, and a smaller bond selection.
The forex catalogue is broad enough for most strategies, with majors, minors, and some exotics. The index lineup covers the main benchmarks, commodities include the core metals and energy products, and the stock CFD range spans major names from the US, Australia, and Hong Kong.
This is a useful all-round offering, but it is not especially deep once you move beyond the headline markets. Share CFD coverage is decent rather than huge, the ETF range is serviceable, and the bond lineup still feels more like a supporting feature than a major strength.
The bigger limitation is structural. GO Markets is a CFD broker, so you are trading derivatives rather than owning underlying shares or accessing a broad exchange-traded options universe. For short-term speculation that may be fine. For investors or traders who want direct market access, it is more restrictive.
Assets & Markets Details
- Instruments: CFDs, Forex, Stocks, Indices, Commodities, Bonds, ETFs, Crypto
- Leverage: 1:500
- Margin Trading: Yes
- Stock Exchanges: Australian Securities Exchange (ASX), CAC 40 Index France, DAX GER 40 Index, Dow Jones, Euronext, FTSE UK Index, Hang Seng, IBEX 35, Nasdaq, New York Stock Exchange, Russell 2000, S&P 500
- Commodities: Copper, Gold, Natural Gas, Oil, Silver, Soybeans, Wheat
- Crypto Coins: BTC, ETH, LTC, DOGE, XRP, BCH, ADA, LINK, POL, SOL, TRX, XLM, EOS, AAVE, ALGO, APT, ARB, ATOM, AVAX, AXS, BNB, COMP, DOT, ETC, GALA, HBAR, ICP, INJ, NEAR, ONDO, OP, PYTH, RENDER, SAND, SUI, TIA, TON, TRUMP, UNI
Fees & Costs
GO Markets is competitive on price without being the cheapest broker we have tested.
The Standard account is simple to understand, but the spread-only model is not ideal for more cost-sensitive strategies. The GO Plus+ account is where the pricing becomes more attractive. In our latest checks, raw spreads on major pairs were often near zero during active periods, with commission bringing the all-in cost to a level that compares well with other established brokers offering MetaTrader and cTrader.
We also found the pricing reasonably transparent. Trading charges were easy to identify, and overnight financing rates were visible enough for anyone holding positions beyond the session. That is worth noting because some brokers remain frustratingly vague on non-commission costs.
GO Markets does not charge broker-side fees on most standard deposits and withdrawals, and there is no inactivity fee. For many traders, those policy choices will matter almost as much as fractional spread differences.
There is also a rebate program for higher-volume traders. It will not materially change the cost picture for occasional traders, but frequent traders may be able to claw back part of their monthly trading spend.
Fees & Costs Details
- Inactivity Fee: $0
- Crypto Spread: Variable
Forex Spreads
- GBP/USD: 0.5
- EUR/USD: 0.2
- GBP/EUR: 0.4
CFD Spreads
- FTSE: 2.3
- GBP/USD: 0.5
- Oil: 0.038
- Stocks: Variable
Platforms & Tools
This is one of GO Markets’ stronger areas. The broker supports MT4, MT5, cTrader, and TradingView integration, giving traders more platform choice than many mid-tier brokers.
MT4 and MT5 delivers what experienced traders would expect: stable charting, support for custom indicators, automated trading, and a mature ecosystem of tools. GO Markets also offers MetaTrader add-ons that proved genuinely useful in testing, improving chart workflow and trade management rather than just adding cosmetic extras.
cTrader stood out most in hands-on use. Order entry felt faster, the interface was cleaner, and depth-of-market tools were better presented. Traders who care about modern execution controls may find it the best fit here.

cTrader
The TradingView connection is another positive. It expands charting options and makes it easier for traders already using that ecosystem to turn analysis into live trades without changing their workflow.
Copy trading is available through both the MetaTrader and cTrader setups, and GO Markets also supports PAMM-style managed allocations. That is a broader social and managed trading toolkit than many rivals offer. Still, these are access tools, not a shortcut to performance. Outcomes depend entirely on the provider or manager being followed.
In addition to MT4, MT5, cTrader, and TradingView, the broker offers GO TradeX™, its proprietary mobile app. It is designed to bridge the gap between the analytical power of TradingView and mobile-first execution.
VPS hosting is also available, though free access depends on meeting a monthly trading threshold. That is helpful for EA users, even if it is not unusually generous by industry standards.
Execution was solid in our tests rather than exceptional. We did not see obvious stability issues, but traders who place extreme weight on ultra-low latency may still find some competitors with a stronger reputation on raw execution speed.
Platforms & Tools Details
- Platforms: GO TradeX™, MT4, MT5, cTrader, TradingView
- Android App Rating:
- iOS App Rating:
- Copy Trading: Yes
- VPS: Yes
- Automated Trading: Expert Advisors (EAs) on MetaTrader, cBots on cTrader
- AI Trading: No
Research
Research is serviceable, but it is not one of the main reasons to choose GO Markets.
The economic calendar is useful and well integrated, and event tracking inside supported platforms helps active traders stay in one workflow. GO Markets also publishes market commentary and trading ideas, but the coverage is uneven and lacks the depth and consistency offered by more research-heavy brokers.
During one of our review passes, parts of the earnings-related content were unavailable, which is exactly the sort of issue that matters because those tools are time-sensitive. That did not leave the best impression.
There is also no strong equivalent here to the premium third-party pattern-recognition or signal suites that some competitors provide. Traders who want a broker to do more of the analytical heavy lifting may find the research stack too light.
Education
Education is stronger than research. GO Markets has built a learning hub with courses, webinars, platform explainers, trading guides, podcasts, and videos that are presented more clearly than at many brokers.
The material is aimed mainly at beginners and lower-intermediate traders rather than advanced professionals, but that is not a flaw. It is organized, practical, and easier to work through than the sprawling content libraries larger firms sometimes publish without much structure.
We found the live sessions and coaching-style features especially useful. They make the educational offering feel active rather than static. Traders looking for highly advanced institutional-level material will still need outside resources, but for retail users building confidence and process, GO Markets does a credible job.
Customer Support
Support was generally efficient in our testing. Live chat responses were usually fast, and email replies were clear enough to resolve issues without unnecessary back-and-forth.
The strongest performance came on routine platform, account, and funding questions. Phone support was less consistent. We had at least one instance where call continuity was poor, which is a weakness if you rely on phone support for urgent issues.
One feature that does stand out is QuickSupport for remote troubleshooting. Used carefully, it can resolve technical problems much faster than long email chains. Not every broker offers that level of hands-on assistance.
GO Markets does not really have a community layer built around support, and its self-service help materials carry more of the load. Still, for direct broker contact, the overall standard was above average in our experience.

Live Chat Support
Community Sentiment
Alongside our own testing, the broader picture looks mixed-positive rather than flawless.
Across several third-party review sites and app stores, GO Markets generally receives favorable feedback for platform choice, relatively clear pricing, and responsive live support. Those themes broadly matched our own experience, which gives them more credibility.
The recurring complaints were also familiar: occasional withdrawal delays, hurdles around verification or payment rules, and the usual disputes over slippage during volatile conditions. None of those are unique to GO Markets, but they appear often enough to be worth taking seriously.
Overall, the wider view is that GO Markets is dependable for most traders, but not spotless. That feels like the fairest conclusion.
Who Should Use GO Markets (And Who Shouldn’t)?
GO Markets is a credible option for active traders who want decent regulation under the right entity, a good range of serious trading platforms, clear pricing, and a straightforward account structure.
Its strengths are practical rather than flashy: broad platform support, competitive costs, useful education, and customer support that generally does its job well. Its weaker areas are also clear: research is only moderate, market depth is not best-in-class, and the offshore entities are materially less reassuring than the ASIC and CySEC operations.
For traders focused on forex and CFD speculation, GO Markets is easy to shortlist. For traders who want the deepest market access, premium in-house research, or the strongest possible regulatory umbrella, there are stronger alternatives.
How We Tested GO Markets
- We first assessed GO Markets several years ago and have revisited the broker multiple times, retesting its pricing, platforms, support, and account processes as the offering changed.
- We opened and tested the live account setup, including onboarding, document checks, platform access, funding routes, and withdrawal requests.
- We placed test trades across various instruments, including energies and commodities across multiple platforms, including our preferred software for active traders – cTrader.
- We checked trading costs during both liquid sessions and busier periods to see whether published pricing broadly matched real platform conditions.
- We contacted customer support several times through chat and email with questions about verification, platforms, and payments to assess response speed and accuracy.
- We also reviewed the education hub, webinars, platform guides, and market research tools to judge whether they add real value for active traders.
- We incorporated feedback from third-party review sites, Apple and Android app stores, and trader forums, to also factor in wider community feedback from other GO Markets traders.
Alternatives To GO Markets
These similar brokers are the highest rated alternatives to GO Markets.
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Trust Platform Assets Fees Accounts Research Education Mobile Support 4.5 Established in 1999, FOREX.com is part of StoneX, a global financial services company that serves over a million customers. It's regulated in the US, UK, EU, Australia, and other countries. The broker offers a wide range of markets beyond forex and provides competitive pricing on advanced platforms. -
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Trust Platform Assets Fees Accounts Research Education Mobile Support 3.0 InstaTrade, located in the British Virgin Islands, is an online broker that focuses on structured fixed income products and active trading via CFDs. Its no-spread accounts, outstanding research primarily from InstaTrade TV, and access to the well-known MT4 and InstaTrade Gear make it a good choice for traders of all levels.