Broker comparison · updated 2026-07-09

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets

Admiral Markets and easyMarkets both publish broad platform and fee information, but the better fit depends on entity, region, and pricing model.

Admiral Markets
64/ 100 · our score
CySECFinantsinspektsioo
Full Admiral Markets review
easyMarkets
62.5/ 100 · our score
CySECASIC
Full easyMarkets review

Our verdict

Admiral Markets has the edge overall.

Admiral Markets is the stronger pick if you want a broker with a clear EU footprint, published account terms, and tighter starting forex pricing on its standard MT4/MT5 accounts. easyMarkets is more compelling if you want a wider native platform mix, including TradingView, and a very clear $25 minimum deposit on many non-EU accounts. Both brands require careful legal-entity checks because terms vary by country, and both have brand/history complexity that makes jurisdiction confirmation important before funding an account. For most readers comparing a classic MT4/MT5 setup, Admirals has the edge; for platform variety and simpler entry funding, easyMarkets does.

Admiral Markets

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets at a glance

Admiral Markets easyMarkets
Our comparison score64 / 10062.5 / 100
FoundedAdmiral Markets group: published on site2001
Cyprus regulatorAdmirals Europe Ltd, CySEC 201/13Easy Forex Trading Ltd, CySEC listed
Australia regulatorNot clearly published on found pagesASIC-regulated per official materials
PlatformsMT4, MT5, web, mobileWeb/app, TradingView, MT4, MT5
Minimum deposit100 EUR$25 on public account page
EUR/USD from0.5 pips0.7 pips
Inactivity fee10 EUR/month after 24 monthsNot published on found pages
Deposits/withdrawals feesDeposits free; withdrawals method-basedNo deposit/withdrawal fees claimed
Instrument count6,000+ instruments claimed275+ CFDs / 135+ on MT5 page

marks the stronger side on that row. Key numbers were re-checked on 2026-07-09. Terms differ by legal entity and country — confirm on the broker's own legal pages before funding.

Score breakdown

How Admiral Markets and easyMarkets earn their comparison scores, component by component — same methodology as every review on this site.

Regulation & oversightout of 30
Admiral Markets
24
easyMarkets
24
Transparency of termsout of 20
Admiral Markets
16
easyMarkets
16
Platforms & toolsout of 15
Admiral Markets
13
easyMarkets
13
Funding & withdrawalsout of 10
Admiral Markets
7
easyMarkets
8
External sentimentout of 10
Admiral Markets
5
easyMarkets
5

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets on fees and pricing

Edge: Admiral MarketsLower starting spread on standard MT4/MT5

Admiral Markets publishes floating spreads from 0.5 pips on its Trade.MT4/Trade.MT5 accounts and from 0 pips on Zero.MT4/Zero.MT5, with a stated inactivity fee of 10 EUR per month after 24 months without trading activity. Deposits are described as free, while withdrawals include one free request per month per payment method. easyMarkets presents a different model: on its web/app, MT4, and TradingView pages it emphasizes fixed spreads on core offerings, with a published EUR/USD figure of 0.7 pips on one account type and 1.7 pips on another, plus a $25 minimum deposit on the standard offering in the public account comparison. The practical difference is structure: Admirals is more explicit about variable pricing tiers, while easyMarkets leans on fixed pricing and simpler entry funding. Terms can differ by legal entity and country.

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets on platforms

Edge: easyMarketsTradingView plus native web/app options

Admiral Markets publishes a straightforward lineup: MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, Admirals web platform, and Admirals Mobile app. Its public site also points clients to MetaTrader Supreme Edition and WebTrader-style access. easyMarkets offers a broader named mix on current pages: easyMarkets web/app, TradingView, MT4, and MT5. That extra TradingView integration is a real distinction for traders who want charting and order entry in the same workflow. Admiral Markets is simpler and more conventional, which may suit traders who already know MT4/MT5 and want fewer platform choices to sort through. easyMarkets is the more versatile platform shop, while Admiral Markets is the more focused one. For mobile-first users, both publish app access, but easyMarkets has a slightly wider public platform story overall.

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets on regulation and entity clarity

Even matchBoth have clear regulator records, but entity checks still matter

Admirals Europe Ltd, the CySEC-licensed Cyprus entity behind the Admirals brand, is listed by CySEC with licence number 201/13 and approved domains including admirals.com and admiralmarkets.com.cy. Admiral Markets also publishes that Admirals Europe Ltd was previously Admiral Markets Cyprus Ltd. easyMarkets’ Cyprus entity, Easy Forex Trading Ltd, is likewise listed by CySEC, and easyMarkets public materials say it is regulated by CySEC and ASIC. easyMarkets also states that it has operated since 2001 and references its Australian presence in public materials. The main caveat is that both brands have naming overlap and regional legal structures, so the exact entity behind your account matters. On the evidence found, neither broker is a clean one-name, one-entity story; both are better treated as jurisdiction-specific firms rather than universal brands.

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets on deposits and withdrawals

Edge: easyMarketsLower published minimum deposit

Admiral Markets publishes a minimum deposit of 100 EUR on its products page and says deposits are free, with withdrawal conditions that depend on method and entity. easyMarkets publishes a minimum deposit of $25 on a current account-comparison page, and its Australian-facing material says no deposit, withdrawal, or commission fees are charged on its platform. In practice, easyMarkets looks easier to start with if the local entity you are opening under supports that $25 entry point. Admirals is less flexible on the headline minimum but is still transparent about funding mechanics and wallet/account transfers. Because these terms vary by region, account type, and payment method, traders should verify the funding page for their specific legal entity before assuming the headline minimum applies everywhere.

Admiral Markets vs easyMarkets on research and trading support

Edge: easyMarketsBroader toolkit and TradingView integration

Admiral Markets’ public site emphasizes contract specifications, fee tables, and platform documentation, which makes it relatively easy to check spreads, swaps, and account conditions before trading. easyMarkets also publishes trading-condition pages and platform guides, and its public materials highlight market news, charting, and risk tools such as guaranteed stop loss and dealCancellation on selected products. Admirals’ research angle is more utilitarian: you get the fee and instrument documentation needed to compare costs. easyMarkets’ research and education positioning is broader and more marketing-led, but it does surface practical tools and platform walkthroughs. For traders who prioritize the ability to inspect pricing and trading conditions, both are adequate; for traders who value a larger toolkit around charts and trade management, easyMarkets has the broader public presentation.

Which broker fits you

Choose Admiral Markets if
  • You want the stronger standard MT4/MT5 pricing story
  • You prefer a broker with a clearly published 100 EUR minimum deposit
  • You value a simpler, more conventional platform lineup
  • You are comparing EU/Cyprus entity documentation closely
Choose easyMarkets if
  • You want TradingView alongside web/app and MT4/MT5
  • You prefer a lower published entry deposit
  • You want fixed-spread-style pricing on key accounts
  • You want a broker with broad public risk-management tool marketing

Common questions

Is Admiral Markets safer than easyMarkets?

Not in a blanket sense. Both have regulator-facing entities and both require you to check the exact legal entity attached to your account. Admiral Markets’ CySEC entity is clearly published, and easyMarkets’ CySEC entity is also listed. Safety depends on the specific jurisdiction, client classification, and account documents, not the brand name alone.

Does easyMarkets really have a lower minimum deposit than Admiral Markets?

On the public pages found, yes. easyMarkets shows a $25 minimum deposit on its account comparison material, while Admirals publishes a 100 EUR minimum deposit on its products page. That said, funding rules can differ by entity and region, so the exact requirement should be checked on the local account-opening page.

Which broker has better platform choice, Admiral Markets or easyMarkets?

easyMarkets has the broader platform mix because it combines its own web/app platform with TradingView, MT4, and MT5. Admiral Markets is more focused, with MT4, MT5, its web platform, and mobile app. If you want the widest public platform menu, easyMarkets has the edge.

Are Admiral Markets and Admirals the same broker?

They are the same brand family in current public materials, but the legal-entity naming has changed over time. CySEC lists Admirals Europe Ltd as the Cyprus firm formerly called Admiral Markets Cyprus Ltd. Because of that history, traders should verify the exact entity and approved domain before opening an account.

Sources for this comparison (8)The primary pages we relied on — worth reading before you open an account.
Risk warning. Forex and CFD trading involves significant risk. Always verify a broker's legal entity, regulator status, fees, restrictions and withdrawal rules before depositing funds.
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