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Friday Jul 10 2026 03:08
18 min

Learning how to choose a CFD broker comes down to one disciplined habit: judging every platform against the same fixed criteria instead of the loudest advert. The right broker for a Dubai or Abu Dhabi trader is the one that's properly authorised to serve UAE residents, keeps its total costs transparent, covers the markets you actually trade — gold and forex especially — and hands you real tools to manage risk. Everything else is a tie-breaker.
This guide turns that into a practical, 10-point CFD broker checklist you can run down before you fund anything. It covers exactly what to look for in a broker, from UAE regulation and spreads to execution, support, and the demo account — and it applies whether you're choosing a trading platform for the first time or switching brokers.
A checklist only works if you apply it the same way every time. So before you compare a single spread, write down how you actually trade: which markets you want (forex, gold, indices, shares, crypto), how often you'll trade, and how much you can genuinely afford to risk. Those answers turn a vague "which is best?" into a scoreable question.
Then run each broker on your shortlist through the 10 points below and mark it pass or fail. The first point — regulation — is a hard gate: if a broker fails it, nothing else counts, no matter how tight the spreads look. The remaining nine are weighted by your own priorities.
Want to see the method in action? You can run Markets.com through this exact checklist on a free demo account — no deposit needed — and score it against any other platform you're weighing up.
Start here, always. A CFD broker holds your money and executes your trades, so it must be authorised to serve UAE residents — both UAE and trusted offshore licenses. The UAE has three regulatory layers worth knowing: the federal Capital Market Authority (CMA), which took over from the Securities and Commodities Authority (SCA) for mainland firms; the Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) inside the Dubai International Financial Centre (DIFC); and the Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA) in Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM). And global CFD trading platform should also authorised by leagl licenses.
Confirm the exact legal entity that would hold your account, then check its name against the regulator's public register. Regulation matters because it typically brings segregated client funds, capital requirements, and a complaints process.
The advertised spread — the gap between the buy and sell price — is only part of what you pay. Add it all up before you judge a broker on cost:
Match the cost structure to your style. A scalper who trades many times a day lives or dies by spread plus commission. A swing trader holding positions for days cares far more about swaps — or a swap-free option. An occasional trader should watch inactivity fees above all. Our lowest spread CFD brokers in the UAE guide breaks the numbers down further; the principle is simply to compare total cost for your trading, not a headline number.
A broker is only useful if it offers the markets you want to trade. For UAE traders, gold coverage is close to non-negotiable, and most active traders also want major forex pairs, key indices, and a selection of shares. If you trade crypto, ETF, or bond CFDs, confirm those too.
Breadth matters for a practical reason: conditions shift, and a one-account platform that spans forex, gold, indices, shares, and crypto lets you follow opportunity without juggling multiple logins. If you already know you'll focus on currencies, check the depth of the forex CFD trading offering — the number of major, minor, and exotic pairs — rather than just the headline instrument count.
You'll spend every trading session on the platform, so it has to work the way you do. Judge it on four things: a stable, fast interface (web and mobile app, since most Gulf traders trade on their phones); genuine charting with the indicators you rely on; the order types you need; and whether it supports MetaTrader (MT4/MT5) if you're already fluent there.
The clearest test is to open the platform and try to do three ordinary things: pull up a chart, place a practice order with a stop attached, and modify it. If any of that feels clumsy, no feature list will fix the daily friction. This is exactly what a demo reveals — more on that in point 10.
Because leverage magnifies losses just as fast as gains, the tools that contain risk belong near the top of your criteria — not buried in a settings menu. At a minimum, look for:
A broker that makes these easy to find and use is telling you it takes trader protection seriously. One that hides them is telling you something too.
This is where a UAE checklist diverges from a generic one. If interest-based charges conflict with your principles, confirm the broker offers a genuine swap-free account that removes overnight swaps on the instruments you trade — and read the terms, because some brokers apply an administration fee or time limit in their place.
Beyond swap-free, "regional fit" covers the practical details that make a broker workable from the Emirates: does it accept Emirates ID for verification, offer Arabic-language support if you want it, and support local funding methods? These won't make or break your trading, but they smooth the experience considerably.
A tight advertised spread means little if your orders fill slowly or at a worse price than you clicked. In fast-moving markets, delays can cause slippage — your trade executing a little away from the expected price. Execution quality comes down to the broker's technology, its liquidity, and platform uptime during busy sessions.
You can't fully judge execution from a marketing page, which is the honest answer here. What you can do is check the broker's track record and operating history, look for any published execution or slippage statistics, and then confirm the feel yourself on a demo during a live news event — when spreads widen and speed actually matters.
How you get money in and — more importantly — out tells you a lot about a broker. Check the supported deposit methods (card, bank transfer, e-wallet), the currencies the account is held in, and whether any deposit or withdrawal fees apply. Confirm the minimum deposit, though for most traders the smarter figure is the amount you can comfortably risk, not the broker's floor.
Pay closest attention to withdrawals. A regulated broker will usually require you to withdraw to the same source you deposited from — a standard anti-fraud measure — and should process requests within a clear, published timeframe. Slow, vague, or obstructed withdrawals are one of the loudest warning signs there is.
When something goes wrong mid-trade, support quality stops being abstract. Look for multiple contact channels — live chat, email, and phone — and hours that match when you trade; 24/5 cover through the trading week is the practical standard. If you can, test responsiveness with a pre-account question and see how long a real reply takes.
Education is the companion factor, especially if you're still building confidence. A good broker offers structured material — articles, tutorials, webinars, and platform walk-throughs — on how the markets work, how leverage and margin behave, and how to manage risk. It signals a broker that wants you to last, not just to deposit.
The final point is the one that validates the other nine. A demo account lets you trade the platform with virtual funds, so you can confirm the spreads, execution feel, tools, and app behaviour before any real money is at stake. Treat it as mandatory, not optional — for beginners and experienced switchers alike.
Any broker worth shortlisting offers one for free. If a platform won't let you try before you fund, treat that as a red flag in itself. Our CFD demo accounts in the UAE guide explains how to get the most from the practice stage; the short version is that the demo is where your checklist stops being theory.
Opening a CFD account on Markets.com takes just a few minutes, whether on the website or mobile app. Follow these five steps to go from sign-up to your first trade.
Step 1: Sign Up for an Account
Visit Markets.com or download the app, click "Create Account," and register with your email or a Google/Facebook/Apple account.

Step 2: Verify Your Identity (KYC)
Complete the KYC check by entering your personal details and uploading proof of identity and address.
Step 3: Fund Your Account
Deposit via card, bank transfer, e-wallet, Apple Pay, or Google Pay. The minimum deposit is $100.

Step 4: Choose a Market and Place Your Trade
Select an asset like gold, forex, or shares. Choose Buy if you expect the price to rise, Sell if you expect it to fall, and set a stop-loss and take-profit before confirming.

Step 5: Manage and Close Your Positions
Monitor open trades, adjust risk settings as needed, and close positions manually or automatically when targets are hit.
New to Markets.com? Claim a generous deposit bonus on your first trade. Hurry—this offer is only available for a limited time.
Some findings aren't a matter of weighing pros and cons — they should stop you cold. Walk away from a CFD broker that shows any of these:
Any single one of these is reason enough to move on. Two or more, and you're not choosing a broker — you're taking a chance you don't need to take.
Even careful traders slip up in predictable ways. Knowing how to choose a CFD broker is partly about avoiding these:
Chasing the headline spread is the classic error — a "0.0 pip" advert can hide a per-lot commission and a hefty swap that make the broker dearer overall. Chasing maximum leverage is the next: high offshore leverage is a way to lose money faster, not a feature, and UAE retail caps limit it anyway.
Others skip the regulation check because a platform "looks professional," ignore withdrawal terms until they try to cash out, or pick a broker built for a different trader — a beginner choosing a bare-bones professional terminal, or an active scalper settling for a broker with sluggish execution. The fix for all of them is the same: score against the checklist, in order, and let the demo confirm what the marketing claims.
The checklist narrows the field; a structured test picks the winner. Here's a simple way to do it without risking capital.
The differences you feel over two weeks of real practice will decide it more honestly than any comparison table — including ours. When you're ready to see how one platform holds up, you can run Markets.com through this checklist on a demo account with virtual funds and compare it directly against your other picks.
Knowing how to choose a CFD broker isn't about finding a single "best" name — it's about applying the same 10-point checklist to every platform and refusing to skip the hard parts. Start with UAE authorisation as a pass-or-fail gate, then weigh total cost, market coverage, platform quality, risk tools, regional fit, execution, funding, support, and the demo against how you actually trade. Watch for the red flags, sidestep the common mistakes, and let a demo account settle the final call. Do that, and you'll choose a broker with clear eyes — then start on a demo before you ever risk real money.
Run every platform through a fixed checklist. Start by confirming it's authorised to serve UAE residents (CMA, DFSA, or ADGM), then compare total cost, market coverage, platform quality, risk tools, execution, funding, and support — and always test it on a free demo before funding.
Regulation. A CFD broker holds your money and fills your trades, so it must be authorised to serve UAE residents by the CMA, the DFSA, or ADGM's FSRA. If a broker fails that check, no spread, tool, or bonus makes it worth using.
Find the exact legal entity that would hold your account, then search that name on the public register of the relevant UAE regulator (CMA, DFSA, or ADGM's FSRA).
Unclear or unverifiable regulation, guaranteed-profit or bonus bait, slow or blocked withdrawals, no demo account, opaque costs, and a hidden or missing risk warning. Any single one is reason to walk away; regulated brokers don't promise returns or hide the risk of loss.
The core checklist is the same — regulation, cost, platform, risk tools, and support. Choosing a forex broker in the UAE just shifts the emphasis toward the range of currency pairs, tight forex spreads, and a swap-free option, since those matter most to FX traders.
Yes. A demo account lets you confirm the spreads, execution, tools, and app with virtual funds before risking a dirham. Shortlist two or three brokers, trade the same market on each demo for a week or two, and let real practice decide.
Dubai Financial Services Authority (DFSA) — public register and regulatory framework: https://www.dfsa.ae/
Abu Dhabi Global Market (ADGM), Financial Services Regulatory Authority (FSRA): https://www.adgm.com/
UAE Capital Market Authority (CMA, formerly the Securities and Commodities Authority): https://www.cma.gov.ae/
Risk Warning: This article is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice, investment research, or a recommendation to trade. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the position of Markets.com. When considering shares, indices, forex (foreign exchange), and commodities for trading and price predictions, remember that trading CFDs involves a significant degree of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. Leveraged products can result in capital loss. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Before trading, ensure you fully understand the risks involved and consider your investment objectives and level of experience. Cryptocurrency CFD trading restrictions may apply depending on jurisdiction.