How to Verify a Broker's License Number
A license number on a website is just text, so the only proof a broker is regulated is what appears on the regulator's own public register — and verifying it takes under five minutes.
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How to Verify a Broker's License Number
A license number on a website is just text. Anyone can type "FCA Reg. 123456." The only proof that a broker is regulated is what appears on the regulator's own public register — and verifying it takes under five minutes.
Every tier-1 regulator publishes a searchable public register. Here is how to use each of them.
The four-step verification
- Locate the license number and regulator name in the broker's footer
- Navigate to that regulator's official register (not a link on the broker's site)
- Search the number or firm name
- Confirm the firm name, address, and permissions match what the broker claims
Where to verify by regulator
| Regulator | Register |
|---|---|
| FCA (UK) | register.fca.org.uk |
| ASIC (Australia) | ASIC Connect Professional Register |
| NFA / CFTC (US) | nfa.futures.org/basicnet |
| FINRA BrokerCheck (US securities) | brokercheck.finra.org |
| CySEC (Cyprus) | cysec.gov.cy |
| BaFin (Germany) | mwbif.bafin.de |
| AMF (France) | amf-france.org |
| FINMA (Switzerland) | finma.ch |
| MAS (Singapore) | mas.gov.sg/fi |
| SFC (Hong Kong) | sfc.hk |
| CIRO (Canada) | ciro.ca |
Always reach the register by typing the URL yourself — phishing pages mimic regulator sites.
What to confirm on the register
- Status: "Authorised", "Approved", "Current" — not "Ceased", "Suspended", or "Former"
- Name match: the registered name matches the firm you are dealing with, exactly
- Address: matches the broker's published address
- Permissions: include the activity you need (dealing, arranging, making a market)
- Disciplinary history: any fines, bans, or enforcement actions
The five common tricks
- Another firm's number: displaying a license that belongs to a different (sometimes defunct) entity. Always cross-check the name.
- Parent vs subsidiary: the license belongs to the group parent; you contract with an offshore subsidiary. Match the entity in your agreement, not the brand.
- Expired license: the firm held a license but surrendered it. Check the status field.
- Fake number: a string that returns no result at all. No result = no license.
- Wrong regulator: an offshore FSC number displayed next to an FCA logo. Verify the named regulator, not the logo.
Entity-level check (the most important)
Brokers with a tier-1 license often onboard you through a separate legal entity. Before depositing, open the client agreement and find the exact legal entity name. Then verify that entity on the register — not the marketing brand. A brand can hold a UK FCA license for its UK entity and still route you through a BVI entity.
Practical steps
- Note the license number and the named regulator from the footer
- Open the regulator's official register yourself
- Confirm name, status, address, and permissions
- Cross-check the legal entity in your client agreement against the register
- Read the disciplinary tab — a clean record matters
Bottom line
Five minutes on a regulator's register is the difference between a protected account and a donation. Verify before you deposit, not after a problem.
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