Fortune FX Review

Updated: February 6, 2026
Fortune FX
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Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank-
Country Code-
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Category Rank-
Engagement metricsVisits0
Bounce Rate0
Pageviews per Visit0
Avg. Visit Duration0
Estimated monthly visitsJuly 20250
August 20250
September 20250
Traffic sourcesSocial-
Paid Referrals-
Mail-
Referrals-
Search-
Direct-

About Fortune FX

Fortune FX operates via domains fortunefx.io and fortunefx.info, presenting itself as an online forex and CFD broker offering multiple trading asset classes including Forex, commodities, and CFDs. It advertises five account types—Starter, Expert, Pro, Prime, and AED PRO—with leverage up to 1:500 and starting minimum deposits ranging from approximately $100 (Starter) up to $100,000 (AED PRO). Accepted trading instruments include Forex, commodity CFDs, and other unspecified assets. Supported trading tools include MetaTrader 5 alongside additional features such as an economic calendar and market news. Payment methods reportedly include Visa, MasterCard, bank transfers, Neteller, and Skrill, with deposits via MasterCard incurring a fee of approximately 6%, whereas withdrawals via Neteller, Skrill, Visa, and MasterCard are said to be fee-free, with bank transfers subject to variable bank fees.

Fortune FX lacks regulation by any recognized financial authority; it holds no valid license from bodies such as the UK’s Financial Conduct Authority or the Hong Kong SFC. The Belgian FSMA issued a warning on November 23, 2022, identifying Fortune FX as a fraudulent online trading platform. WikiFX and other industry sources confirm an absence of regulation, assigning the broker a very low trust rating and classifying it as high risk.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Offers a range of account tiers with high leverage and various claimed deposit options.
  • Supports common deposit and withdrawal methods including Visa, MasterCard, Neteller, Skrill, and bank transfers.

Cons

  • No regulatory oversight from any recognized authority; flagged as fraudulent by Belgium’s FSMA.
  • Lack of transparent company information; inconsistent claims regarding jurisdiction (Hong Kong, UK, SVG) and operator details.
  • High leverage up to 1:500 exceeds limits permitted by major regulated jurisdictions.
  • Reports of deposit and withdrawal issues, absence of consumer protections (such as segregated accounts or compensation schemes).

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