Trust and transparency
Editorial policy
Forextrade.wiki is built for readers comparing forex brokers, CFD platforms and trading apps. Our editorial policy explains how we create reviews, handle affiliate links, update pages and describe financial risk.
Review principles
- Useful before promotional: a review should help a reader decide, compare or avoid a poor fit.
- Specific before vague: fees, product type, legal entity and risk notes matter more than generic praise.
- Country-aware: broker availability and protection schemes can vary by jurisdiction.
- Risk-aware: leveraged trading products are never presented as default beginner products.
- Transparent: affiliate disclosure, last checked dates and methodology links should be easy to find.
How we create reviews
Forextrade.wiki broker reviews are written to answer practical reader questions: what the broker is good for, who should avoid it, which fees matter, what protections may apply and what should be checked before opening an account. We avoid generic promotional summaries and focus on decision-useful details.
What we check
Our editorial checks focus on broker disclosures, fee schedules, regulation, investor-protection notes, account minimums, available products, country restrictions, platform access, risk warnings and comparison context. When a detail can vary by legal entity or country, we flag that readers should verify the current local terms.
Updates and corrections
Broker terms can change without notice. We prioritize updates when fees, product availability, investor-protection rules, regulatory context or major platform features materially affect a reader decision. If we find an error, we correct the page and update the relevant review or guide.
Affiliate and referral links
Some links may be affiliate or referral links. Commercial relationships do not determine our ratings, risk notes or editorial conclusions. A broker can be commercially tracked and still receive a cautious review, and a non-commercial broker can still be included when it is useful for comparison.
Risk language
We do not publish claims of guaranteed returns, easy profits, risk-free trading or one-size-fits-all recommendations. Forex, CFDs, margin, options, futures and copy trading should be described clearly so readers understand when a broker account becomes more speculative.
What our content is not
Forextrade.wiki does not provide personal financial, investment, tax, legal or brokerage advice. Our pages are educational comparison resources. Readers should make their own decision, check broker terms directly and consider professional advice where appropriate.
Editorial workflow
1. Define the reader decision
Before writing or updating a page, we identify the decision it should support: choosing a first forex broker, comparing CFD platforms, checking leverage risk, understanding client protection or narrowing a two-broker shortlist.
2. Check the decision-critical facts
We prioritize fees, legal entity, product type, country availability, account limitations, investor-protection context, risk disclosures and platform fit over broad brand descriptions.
3. Add risk and alternatives
Reviews and comparisons should explain who the broker may fit, who should avoid it, which alternatives to compare and which checks must happen before funding an account.
4. Revisit when facts change
Pages can be updated when broker terms, fees, product access, regulation, compensation schemes, platform features or reader-facing risks materially change.
Related standards
Our editorial policy works together with the broker review methodology and risk disclaimer. Readers should use all three when evaluating broker rankings or reviews.