Broker comparison · updated 2026-07-09

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro

Capital.com and Colmex Pro are both regulated CFD brokers, but they differ sharply on deposit size, platform breadth, and current product access.

Capital.com
73.5/ 100 · our score
CySECSCB (Bahamas)
Full Capital.com review
Colmex Pro
70/ 100 · our score
CySECFSCA
Full Colmex Pro review

Our verdict

Capital.com has the edge overall.

Capital.com is the stronger choice for most readers who want a lower entry point, a broader platform lineup, and clearer public fee disclosure. Its official fee pages show a 10 USD/EUR/GBP minimum deposit for cards and Apple Pay, plus a 50 EUR wire minimum, while its platform pages list a proprietary web platform, mobile app, TradingView, MT4, and MT5. Colmex Pro has the edge only for readers specifically comparing its equities-focused offering and published account tiers, but its $1,000 minimum for the equity account is far higher, and its public site says it no longer offers CFD products to new clients as of January 30, 2026. Terms also vary by legal entity and country for both firms.

Capital.com

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro at a glance

Capital.com Colmex Pro
Our comparison score73.5 / 10070 / 100
Founded20162010
Primary regulator(s)SCB; Cyprus-linked entityCySEC; FSCA
Minimum deposit10 USD/EUR/GBP cards$1,000 equity acct
Wire transfer minimum50 EURNot published
PlatformsWeb, app, TV, MT4/5Colmex Pro 2.0, MT4
Published instruments5,500+Not published
Inactivity fee10 USD/EUR/GBP monthlyNot clearly standardized
CFD access for new clientsAvailableNo CFD for new clients

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 Capital.com and Colmex Pro earn their comparison scores, component by component — same methodology as every review on this site.

Regulation & oversightout of 30
Capital.com
26
Colmex Pro
26
Transparency of termsout of 20
Capital.com
17
Colmex Pro
16
Platforms & toolsout of 15
Capital.com
14
Colmex Pro
13
Funding & withdrawalsout of 10
Capital.com
9
Colmex Pro
7
External sentimentout of 10
Capital.com
8.5
Colmex Pro
8

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro on fees and minimum deposit

Edge: Capital.comMuch lower starting deposit and clearer fee page

Capital.com is materially cheaper to start with. Its fee page says the minimum deposit is 10 USD/EUR/GBP for bank cards and Apple Pay, while wire transfers require at least 50 EUR or the currency equivalent. Colmex Pro’s FAQ says the minimum deposit for an equity account is $1,000, and its pricing page shows higher published tiers from $3,000 to $100,000. On trading costs, both firms use variable pricing by product and account type, so the live spread or commission depends on the instrument and legal entity. For a new retail client, the practical difference is simple: Capital.com is the lighter funding commitment, while Colmex Pro asks for a much larger opening balance.

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro on platforms and tools

Edge: Capital.comMore platform options, including TradingView and MT5

Capital.com has the broader platform stack. Its official product pages list a web platform, mobile app, TradingView, MT4, MT5, and API access. That gives it a wider choice for charting, mobile use, and third-party workflows. Colmex Pro publishes Colmex Pro 2.0, MT4, Web Trader, and Mobile, which is a respectable lineup but narrower overall. The difference matters most to traders who want more than one way to access the market: Capital.com covers proprietary and third-party tools in one place, while Colmex Pro looks more centered on its own interface plus MT4. If you care about platform choice, Capital.com has the clearer advantage.

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro on regulation and legal entities

Even matchBoth are regulated, but entity terms differ by country

Both brokers publish recognizable regulator disclosures, but the legal setup differs. Capital.com’s public materials identify regulation by the Securities Commission of The Bahamas for one entity, and its site also references Cyprus-related operations on other pages; this means the exact protections and product terms depend on the entity and client location. Colmex Pro’s site says Colmex Pro Ltd is regulated by CySEC under license 123/10 and also lists an FSCA authorization in South Africa under license 46990. Colmex Pro’s public documents also show a Cyprus Investment Firm history dating back to 2010. On paper, neither firm is unregulated, but both require careful reading of the specific entity that will hold the account. For U.S. readers, the jurisdiction check is especially important because availability is restricted.

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro on funding and account access

Edge: Capital.comLower entry threshold and more transparent funding page

Capital.com is the more accessible funder. Its published deposit pages show card and Apple Pay minimums at 10 USD/EUR/GBP, with wire transfer set at 50 EUR or equivalent, and it also lists multiple deposit methods on its help pages. Colmex Pro’s public FAQ is less flexible at the entry level, with a $1,000 minimum for the equity account, and its pricing material does not present a similarly simple universal deposit floor across all account types. Funding method availability also appears more dependent on account type and region at Colmex Pro. For readers who want to start small and test a broker before committing larger capital, Capital.com is easier to fund.

Capital.com vs Colmex Pro on research disclosure and product scope

Edge: Capital.comBroader product scope and current retail access

Capital.com publishes a broad product and pricing disclosure set, including fee pages, platform pages, and instrument coverage that includes thousands of CFD markets. Its site says it offers 5,500+ instruments, which supports a more expansive trading universe. Colmex Pro publishes pricing, FAQ, and legal-documentation pages, but its current public materials also say it no longer offers CFD products to new clients as of January 30, 2026. That makes the comparison more nuanced: Colmex Pro still has a public regulated identity and a visible platform stack, but its current product scope is narrower for new onboarding. For most readers comparing present-day access and public disclosure, Capital.com is the more straightforward option.

Which broker fits you

Choose Capital.com if
  • You want the lower minimum deposit
  • You want TradingView plus MT4/MT5
  • You prefer broader public fee disclosure
  • You want a larger published instrument range
Choose Colmex Pro if
  • You specifically want Colmex Pro’s equities-style setup
  • You are comparing its regulated Cyprus entity
  • You are comfortable with a higher opening balance
  • You only need its core platform set

Common questions

Is Capital.com cheaper than Colmex Pro?

Usually yes. Capital.com publishes a 10 USD/EUR/GBP minimum deposit for cards and Apple Pay, while Colmex Pro’s FAQ shows a $1,000 minimum deposit for an equity account. Trading costs still depend on the instrument and account/entity, so compare the live spread or commission before opening either account.

Does Colmex Pro still offer CFDs?

Its public site says CFD products are no longer offered to new clients as of January 30, 2026. That makes Colmex Pro a different comparison from a broker actively onboarding new CFD traders. Always check the live legal documents for your country and account type before applying.

Is Capital.com available in the United States?

No. Capital.com’s public materials and account restrictions indicate it does not serve U.S. citizens. Availability also varies by legal entity and country, so readers outside the U.S. should still confirm which entity would handle their account.

Which broker has more platforms, Capital.com or Colmex Pro?

Capital.com. Its platform pages list a proprietary web platform, mobile app, TradingView, MT4, MT5, and API access. Colmex Pro lists Colmex Pro 2.0, MT4, Web Trader, and Mobile, which is smaller in scope.

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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