EuropeFX Review

Updated: February 12, 2026
EuropeFX
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Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank7752438
Country CodeGB
Country Rank1187644
Category Rank8233
Engagement metricsVisits2204
Bounce Rate0.3821
Pageviews per Visit1.35
Avg. Visit Duration8.68
Estimated monthly visitsJuly 20251715
August 20253824
September 20252204
Top countriesTunisia (TN)68.63%
United Kingdom (GB)18.58%
Norway (NO)12.79%
Traffic sourcesSearch52.15%
Direct28.47%
Referrals11.97%
Social5.1%
Paid Referrals1.37%
Mail0.42%
Top keywordsgbp to eur141840 ◦ $1.28 ◦ $0
hkd to usd125210 ◦ $0.23 ◦ $0
gbp to pkr86650 ◦ $0.93 ◦ $0
euro to aud77210 ◦ $0.89 ◦ $0
euro to sek66360 ◦ $0.63 ◦ $0

About EuropeFX

EuropeFX is operated by Maxiflex Ltd, a Cyprus Investment Firm (CIF) that was regulated by the Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) under licence number 258/14 and registered under number HE327484 (). Under that licence, EuropeFX was required to segregate client funds, provide negative balance protection, and was a member of the Investor Compensation Fund (ICF) protecting retail clients up to €20,000 ().

CySEC suspended the CIF licence of Maxiflex Ltd trading as EuropeFX, effective 15 October 2021 (). Since that date, EuropeFX has not held any valid regulatory authorisation (). Courts found that EuropeFX had engaged in unlawful conduct, including providing financial services without authorisation in Australia, and pressured clients into high‑risk trading, resulting in significant client losses ().

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Previously held regulated status under CySEC CIF licence 258/14, with client fund segregation, negative balance protection, and ICF coverage up to €20,000.

Cons

  • Licence was suspended on 15 October 2021; the broker is no longer regulated by CySEC.
  • Court findings of unlawful conduct, including unauthorised provision of financial services and client pressure into high‑risk trades with substantial losses.

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