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CySEC and Offshore Regulation Truth

Many well-known forex brands hold a CySEC license that is real, but it protects only clients routed through the Cyprus entity — trade the offshore subsidiary and EU protection is gone.

T By tradernewbie · Curated for beginners
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CySEC and Offshore Regulation Truth

Many of the world's best-known forex brands hold a CySEC license. That license is real — but it protects only the clients routed through the Cyprus entity. Trade through the same broker's offshore subsidiary and you may have left EU protection entirely.

Cyprus is a full EU member state, so a CySEC license passports across the bloc under MiFID II. That combination — EU access at a low cost — made it the default home for retail forex and CFD brands.

What CySEC actually gives you

A Cyprus Investment Firm (CIF) license brings:

  • ESMA-aligned rules: leverage caps, negative balance protection, margin close-out, no bonuses
  • Investor Compensation Fund (ICF): up to €20,000 per client if the firm fails (covering 90% of the claim)
  • Segregation of client funds from firm money
  • MiFID II passport: service EU clients from a single license

The €20,000 gap

The ICF's €20,000 ceiling is far below the UK FSCS's £85,000. A trader with €100,000 on deposit at a failed CySEC broker recovers only €20,000 from the fund. The rest depends on bankruptcy proceedings.

The dual-entity structure

This is the truth that matters most. Many Cyprus-licensed brokers operate two entities:

Entity Clients Leverage Protection
Cyprus CIF EU residents 30:1 caps ICF, ESMA rules
BVI / Seychelles subsidiary Non-EU residents 500:1+ Local (weak)

The broker markets one brand, but the legal counterparty depends on your residency. A non-EU client signing up with the offshore entity leaves all EU protection behind — even though the brand looks "EU-regulated."

The CySEC license protects EU clients routed through the CIF. It does not protect you if you are on the offshore entity, no matter how prominently the brand displays its CySEC number.

Enforcement reputation

CySEC's enforcement was historically lighter than the FCA's, with a perception of slower action and lower fines. It has improved meaningfully since 2018, with higher fines, stricter reporting, and clearer conduct expectations. But "CySEC-regulated" still means a weaker backstop than "FCA-regulated."

How to verify and protect yourself

  1. Find the broker's CIF license number (footer)
  2. Search it on the CySEC Register (cysec.gov.cy)
  3. Identify which entity you are contracting with — read the account-opening terms
  4. If the entity is offshore (BVI, Seychelles), assume no ICF and no ESMA caps
  5. EU residents should insist on being placed under the Cyprus CIF entity

Practical steps

  1. Verify the CIF number on the CySEC Register
  2. Confirm the legal entity in your client agreement is the Cyprus CIF
  3. Size deposits to the €20,000 ICF ceiling if you rely on it
  4. Treat the offshore subsidiary as a separate, riskier broker
  5. Prefer the FCA or ASIC entity if the same brand offers one

Bottom line

A CySEC license is genuine EU regulation — for the EU entity. The offshore subsidiary of the same brand is a different broker with different rules. Knowing which one you're trading through is the whole game.

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Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk