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GO Markets Regulation & Safety — Entity-Sensitive Read

🟢 Tier 1 Regulated

Trust stack

Trust metadata for GO Markets regulation coverage

This subpage inherits the main GO Markets review standards, disclosure links, and methodology references.

Updated
May 3, 2026
Methodology
Methodology
Corrections / contact
Corrections / Contact

The useful regulation question is not “is GO Markets regulated?”

The useful question is which legal entity will actually hold your account. GO Markets may show multiple regulators at brand level, but protections, leverage caps, and complaint routes can change once you land in a specific entity.

Regulator checker for GO Markets

Small, evidence-led tools for fees, regulation, and platform fit. Unknown stays unknown.

Regulator checker

GO Markets shows 3 regulators in the structured dataset, with 2 top-tier and 1 offshore licence.

GO Markets shows 3 regulators in the shared broker dataset. Treat that as a brand-level trust signal, not proof of the exact legal entity you will onboard with.
GO Markets mixes stronger and lighter regulatory footprints in the shared dataset. The account-opening entity can change leverage, complaint paths, and what protections you actually get.
  • Confirm the exact legal entity in the signup flow before funding.
  • Use the regulator register link below instead of relying on a homepage badge.
  • If the broker can route clients offshore, verify whether leverage and complaint routes change under that entity.
Compact support layer
Regulation

Do not stop at the badge. Confirm the legal entity, then check the regulator register, compensation route, and leverage cap tied to that entity.

Fees

Spread headlines are not the whole bill. Funding currency, withdrawal rules, inactivity fees, and account-type selection can matter more than 0.2 pips.

Risk

A broker can be cheap and still be a bad outcome if leverage or product complexity pushes you into oversized risk.

Platform fit

Platform fit is workflow fit. Order entry, automation, charting, and mobile habits matter more than whether the interface looks modern.

Structured regulator coverage

Regulator Country Tier Registry
ASIC — Australian Securities and Investments Commission Australia Tier 1 Open register →
CySEC — Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission Cyprus Tier 1 Open register →
FSA — Financial Services Authority (Seychelles) Seychelles Offshore Open register →

Protections the repo supports

  • Negative balance protection is explicitly stated in the repo review.
  • Segregated client funds is explicitly stated in the repo review.
  • ASIC requires client-fund segregation, but Australia does not run an FSCS-style retail compensation scheme.
  • ICF coverage up to €20,000 for eligible clients under the Cyprus entity.

Entity nuance

GO Markets shows 3 regulators in the shared broker dataset. Treat that as a brand-level trust signal, not proof of the exact legal entity you will onboard with.

GO Markets mixes stronger and lighter regulatory footprints in the shared dataset. The account-opening entity can change leverage, complaint paths, and what protections you actually get.

What we still do not model cleanly

The repo does not yet maintain a broker-by-broker enforcement-history dataset or a complete legal-entity table with licence numbers for every brand. So this page helps you verify the right things quickly, but it should not be read as a substitute for opening the relevant register entry yourself.

Bottom line

GO Markets shows 3 regulators in the structured dataset, with 2 top-tier and 1 offshore licence. If the broker can route clients through both stronger and lighter jurisdictions, treat the stronger badge as a possibility, not an automatic outcome.

Keep moving through the GO Markets research cluster

This page should not be a dead-end satellite. Jump back to the full review, compare GO Markets with alternatives, or move into a shortlist before you make the call.

Ready to trade with GO Markets?

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Open GO Markets Account
7.8 / 10
Overall Score
Based on 8 categories
Trading Costs 8.0
Platforms & Tools 8.0
Regulation & Trust 8.5
Education 7.0
Customer Service 7.5
Research & Analysis 7.5
Deposit & Withdrawal 7.5
Product Range 7.0

Risk layer

Risk & regulation snapshot for GO Markets

Regulation

Third-party

ASIC, CySEC, FSA

Leverage / exposure

Broker-stated

1:500 (high-risk if you size trades badly)

Trust read

Verified

Tier 1 trust profile

Regulation status

Third-party

ASIC, CySEC gives the brand real tier-1 coverage, but the footprint is mixed because FSA also appears in the regulator stack.

Entity nuance

Third-party

GO Markets should be treated as a multi-entity broker until the exact onboarding entity is confirmed.

Investor protection

Unknown

Top-tier regulation helps on paper, but the canonical dataset still does not lock the exact compensation scheme or client-money safeguards for every onboarding entity.

Verification state

Verified

Verification state: regulator list is visible, but entity-level verification is still incomplete.

High-risk warning

Broker-stated

A 1:500 ceiling is aggressive retail leverage. Small mistakes can snowball fast even if the broker itself is regulated.

Safer alternative lens

If this profile feels too aggressive, compare brokers with cleaner tier-1 coverage and lower leverage ceilings before funding an account.

Quick Facts

Founded
2006
Headquarters
Melbourne, Australia
Regulation
ASIC, CySEC, FSA
Min Deposit
$200
Max Leverage
1:500
Spreads From
0.0 pips
Platforms
MT4, MT5, cTrader
Support
24/5 Live Chat, Email, Phone