Brokers  /  DIGITAL FX TRADING

DIGITAL FX TRADING

High risk
🇬🇧 United Kingdom · < 1 year · since 2026-01-06 · Digital FX Trading
Unregulated
Visit site ↗
Independent ratingshow third parties score this broker
WikiFX1.11/10
Trustpilot2.9/5
Forex Peace Army/5
54
High risk
Scam Risk Scoremonitored · 2026-07-05
Lower riskHigher risk
  • No verified regulatory license on file
  • Recently established — about 6 months old
How this score is calculated — view the open algorithm

A transparent weighted score from objective public data — each factor scored 0–100 (higher = riskier), combined by the weights below.

FactorScoreWeight
Regulation & licensing8535%
Company age9215%
Clone / impersonation012%
Withdrawal & exposure complaints012%
Offshore registration108%
Transparency (site/info/social)5310%
Real-user sentiment508%

Based on public regulatory records, industry databases and independent reviews (Trustpilot, Forex Peace Army). Exit Risk reflects recent negative momentum in real reviews. A risk estimate from public data, not a definitive legal judgment; brokers may request a correction.

Company
Legal nameDigital FX Trading
Headquarters🇬🇧 United Kingdom
Founded2026-01-06
Years operating< 1 year
Employees0
Official websitedigitalfxtrading.com
Trading conditions
Avg execution speed0 ms
Avg slippage0
Swap rating
Trading cost rating
Monitored traders0
Monitored orders0
Funding & instruments
Deposit methods
Withdrawal methods
Instruments
Registered address
Unit 1 Lancaster Court, Coronation Road, Cressex Business Park, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, HP12 3TD

Regulation & licenses · 0

No valid regulatory license found — high caution advised.

Review analysis AI

Rating mismatch — Industry-tracker scores run far lower than real users do (gap -2.34)

The review record is minimal but starkly polarised: two five-star ratings praise the broker’s trustworthiness, while a lone one-star review brands it an outright scam. With only three reviews total, the sample is too thin to be definitive, but the grave scam allegation—combined with the company’s total lack of regulation—adds substantial weight to the negative claim.

Not for
  • beginner traders
  • risk-averse investors
  • regulation-conscious traders
Period:
What users complain about
What users praise
Where reviewers are from
🇬🇧 GB2
PT1
Positive vs negative · last 3 months Pos Neg
Mar
Apr
Jan

Real user reviews

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About DIGITAL FX TRADING

Company Profile

Digital FX Trading is a forex and CFD broker that lists its registered address as Unit 1 Lancaster Court, Coronation Road, Cressex Business Park, High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, HP12 3TD in the United Kingdom. The company was founded on 6 January 2026, making it a very young entrant to the online trading industry.

According to its corporate filings, Digital FX Trading currently reports having zero employees. The legal entity operating under this name is simply ‘Digital FX Trading’, and there is no indication of any parent group or international subsidiaries. This corporate footprint is unusually light for a retail brokerage, which typically requires at least a small compliance, support and dealing team.

The company’s website does not provide an ‘About Us’ page, management biographies or a corporate timeline. This lack of institutional transparency makes it difficult for prospective clients to gauge the broker’s experience, capital base or operational stability.

Regulatory Status

Digital FX Trading holds no licence from any recognised financial regulator. A thorough search of the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) register, as well as major international registries, returns no active authorisation for this entity.

What this means in practice is that the broker operates entirely outside the supervisory perimeter. There is no external body monitoring its capital adequacy, client-fund segregation, trade execution or complaint handling. In the event of insolvency or misconduct, clients have no access to compensation schemes such as the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) in the UK or any comparable investor-protection fund.

In the UK, firms that offer forex and CFD trading to retail clients are generally required to be authorised by the FCA unless they can rely on an exemption—which would typically involve an overseas licence and clear disclosure. Digital FX Trading does neither. Its registration at a UK address might create an impression of oversight, but Companies House registration does not confer regulatory status.

Trading Products and Platforms

The broker has not publicly disclosed any information regarding the financial instruments it offers. It is unknown whether clients can trade forex, contracts for difference (CFDs), commodities, indices, cryptocurrencies or other asset classes.

Similarly, there is no specification of the trading platform(s) available. Most retail brokers offer MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader or a proprietary web-based interface, but Digital FX Trading has not published any such details. The absence of platform information makes it impossible to assess execution speed, charting tools, automated trading support or security features.

The broker does not provide a product schedule, contract specifications or a list of symbols. For a trader, this opacity is a significant obstacle, as it prevents any meaningful comparison with regulated competitors and obscures the true cost of trading.

Account Types and Funding

No account tiers, minimum deposits or leverage limits have been disclosed by Digital FX Trading. Standard industry practice sees brokers publish a clear table of account types—ranging from micro to VIP—each with defined spreads, commissions, leverage and additional services. The absence of any such table from this broker is concerning.

Likewise, funding and withdrawal methods remain unspecified. It is unknown whether deposits can be made via bank transfer, credit/debit card, e-wallet services (such as Skrill or Neteller) or even cryptocurrency. The broker does not state its withdrawal processing times, any fees attached, or the documentation required for client verification.

This lack of transparency around the financial pipeline creates an environment in which clients cannot verify that their funds will be handled securely or that they will be able to exit their positions and retrieve their capital in a timely manner.

User Feedback and Reputation

Digital FX Trading has a minimal online footprint. On Trustpilot, it holds a score of 2.9 out of 5, based on just three reviews. The feedback is sharply divided: two reviewers gave the maximum 5 stars and described the broker as ‘reliable and trustworthy’ and ‘the best company to trade with’, while one reviewer awarded a single star with the blunt assessment that the company is a ‘full on scam’ and that you ‘will never see your money again’.

There are no reviews on Forex Peace Army, and major forex forums contain no independent discussion threads about this brand. The total lack of detailed, balanced and long‑term user commentary makes it impossible to construct a reliable picture of client satisfaction, typical withdrawal times or dispute resolution practices.

Potential clients should treat such a thin and polarised review base with caution. The positive reviews, while encouraging on their face, could be fabricated or incentivised—a common tactic among unregulated operators seeking to build a veneer of legitimacy.

Overall Risk Considerations

Given the complete absence of regulatory oversight, the lack of any disclosed trading conditions, and the company’s skeletal corporate structure, prospective traders should approach Digital FX Trading with extreme caution. The broker’s failure to provide even the most basic operational information is a glaring red flag.

FXCanary’s assessment, reflected in its Scam Risk Score of 54 out of 100, places this broker in the elevated-risk category. While 54 is not the highest possible score, it signals that the probability of encountering serious difficulties—ranging from delayed withdrawals to total loss of capital—is significantly above the industry average.

Anyone still considering trading through Digital FX Trading should demand full documentation of its regulatory status, request a demo account to test the platform, and only ever deposit funds they can afford to lose entirely.

Overview compiled by FXCanary from regulatory records and public data. full DIGITAL FX TRADING review