XM Broker Regulation 2026 — All Licences Explained, Investor Protection Per Entity & How to Verify CySEC, ASIC, IFSC & DFSA
Everything you need to know about XM's regulatory framework: which entity applies to your account, what protections each licence provides, how to verify licence numbers directly, and how regulation affects leverage and compensation.
XM Regulation 2026 — All Regulatory Entities Overview and Why Multi-Jurisdiction Matters
XM operates through multiple separately regulated legal entities, each serving a specific geographic market and falling under the oversight of that region's financial regulator. This multi-entity structure allows XM to tailor trading conditions, leverage limits, and investor protections to each market's requirements.
Understanding XM's regulatory structure is essential because it directly affects your account's investor protection level, maximum leverage, bonus eligibility, and dispute resolution options. The entity that applies to you is determined by your country of residence at the time of registration.
✅ XM Regulation Summary — 5 Entities, Verified May 2026
- CySEC (Cyprus): Trading Point of Financial Instruments Ltd — Licence 120/10 — EU/EEA clients — Tier 1
- ASIC (Australia): XM Australia Pty Ltd — AFSL 443670 — Australian clients — Tier 1
- DFSA (Dubai): Trading Point MENA Limited — Licence F003484 — UAE/MENA institutional clients — Tier 1
- FSCA (South Africa): XM ZA (Pty) Ltd — FSP 49976 — South African clients — Tier 2
- FSC (Belize): XM Global Limited — Licence 000261/397 — Global clients (most traders) — Tier 4
Each XM Regulatory Entity Explained — Protections, Coverage & Licence Verification Links
Which XM Regulatory Entity Applies to Your Account — How to Find Out
Your regulatory entity is determined by your country of residence at registration and cannot be changed after account opening. Here is how to identify yours:
| Your region | XM Entity | ตัวควบคุม | ใบอนุญาติ |
|---|---|---|---|
| EU / EEA (all 30 countries) | จุดซื้อขายของเครื่องมือทางการเงิน จำกัด | ไซเซ็ก | 120/10 |
| Australia | XM Australia Pty Ltd | asic | AFSL 443670 |
| UAE / MENA (institutional) | เทรดดิ้ง เมนา จำกัด | DFSA | F003484 |
| South Africa | XM ZA (Pty) Ltd | FSCA | 49976 |
| All other countries (global) | เอ็กซ์เอ็ม โกลบอล จำกัด | FSC Belize | 000261/397 |
To confirm your exact entity: log into your XM Members Area → Account Details → the legal entity and its regulator are listed alongside your account number and server. Alternatively, scroll to the footer of the Terms of Service you accepted — the regulating entity is named explicitly.
Investor Protection Comparison — What Each XM Regulatory Entity Actually Protects You From
| อารักขา | CySEC (EU) | ASIC (AU) | DFSA (UAE) | FSCA (ZA) | FSC (Global) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Segregated funds (mandatory) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | Policy only |
| การป้องกันยอดคงเหลือติดลบ | ✓ MiFID II | ✓ ASIC | ✓ | ✓ | Policy only |
| Investor compensation scheme | €20,000 (ICF) | ไม่ | Varies | ไม่ | ไม่ |
| Regular auditing | ✓ Strict | ✓ Strict | ✓ | ✓ | เบี้อง |
| Leverage cap (major forex) | 1:30 | 1:30 | Varies | 1:500 | 1:1000 |
| สิทธิ์โบนัส | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | คับแคบ | ✓ Full |
XM Leverage Limits by Regulatory Entity — Maximum Leverage for Forex, Gold & Indices 2026
| เครื่องไม้เครื่องมือ | FSC Belize (Global) | CySEC (EU) | ASIC (AU) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Major forex pairs (EUR/USD etc.) | 1:1000 | 1:30 | 1:30 |
| Minor forex pairs | 1:1000 | 1:20 | 1:20 |
| ทอง (XAU/USD) | 1:500 | 1:20 | 1:20 |
| Major equity indices (US30, Nasdaq) | 1:200 | 1:20 | 1:20 |
| น้ำมัน (WTI, Brent) | 1:100 | 1:10 | 1:10 |
| Individual stock CFDs | 1:20 | 1:5 | 1:5 |
The higher leverage available under the FSC Belize entity (up to 1:1000) is one reason traders outside the EU and Australia often prefer the global entity — alongside bonus eligibility. However, higher leverage also increases risk proportionally. Always use appropriate risk management regardless of entity.
How to Verify XM's Regulatory Licences Directly on Official Regulator Websites
Any legitimate regulated broker makes its licence number verifiable on the relevant regulator's public register. Here is exactly how to verify each XM licence in under 2 minutes per regulator:
🔍 Step-by-Step Verification for Each Regulator
- CySEC (120/10): คลาไคล
cysec.gov.cy→ Regulated Entities → search "Trading Point of Financial Instruments" or licence "120/10" - ASIC (443670): คลาไคล
asic.gov.au→ Check a licence → search AFSL "443670" or company name "Trading Point of Financial Instruments Pty Ltd" - DFSA (F003484): คลาไคล
dfsa.ae→ Public Register → search "Trading Point MENA Limited" or "F003484" - FSCA (49976): คลาไคล
fsca.co.za→ Financial Service Providers → search FSP "49976" or "XM ZA" - FSC Belize (000261/397): คลาไคล
ifsc.gov.bz→ Licensees → search "XM Global Limited"
⚠️ Red Flags — Signs a Broker Is Not Legitimately Regulated
- Licence number cannot be found on the regulator's official website
- Licence number belongs to a different company than the one you're registering with
- Regulator website does not exist or redirects to broker's own page
- Broker claims regulation by obscure or unrecognised authorities with no verifiable public register
- Licence is for a different financial activity (e.g. insurance, not investment services)
XM passes all these checks. All five XM licences are verifiable on their respective official regulator websites using the licence numbers listed on this page and in XM's Terms of Service. For a full review of XM including live-tested spread data and 8 withdrawal tests, see our comprehensive XM broker review.
Frequently Asked Questions — XM Broker Regulation 2026
Open XM Account — Regulated by CySEC, ASIC, DFSA & More
XM is one of the most comprehensively regulated international brokers. Open free, verify which entity applies to your country, and start trading with full transparency about your investor protection level.
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