PRECISIONFX Review

Updated: March 27, 2026
PRECISIONFX
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Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank-
Country Code-
Country Rank-
Category Rank-
Engagement metricsVisits0
Bounce Rate0
Pageviews per Visit0
Avg. Visit Duration0
Estimated monthly visitsDecember 20250
January 20260
February 20260
Traffic sourcesSocial-
Paid Referrals-
Mail-
Referrals-
Search-
Direct-

About PRECISIONFX

PrecisionFX operates via the website precisionfx.org and presents itself as a trading and investment service, offering high daily returns (e.g., “15% Starter‑Plan daily,” “25% Professional‑Plan daily,” “40% Unlimited‑Plan daily”) and promoting a “unique trading robot” alongside a referral/affiliate structure. The company claims registration as “PRECISION FX LTD,” Company No. 13699699, at the address 55 Aylmer Road, East Finchley, London, N2 0AT.()

The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) issued an official warning on 28 March 2025 stating that PrecisionFX is not authorised to provide financial services in the UK and advising individuals to avoid dealing with the firm; the warning confirms the firm may be targeting UK investors.() The platform’s attempts to appear legitimate via a purported Companies House registration are contradicted by records that show the company number is linked to a dissolved entity, undermining the claim.()

The Spanish regulator CNMV issued a warning on 27 October 2025 that PrecisionFX is not authorised under Spanish law to provide investment services or crypto‑asset services, including foreign currency transactions, and is in breach of EU Regulation 2023/1114 requirements.()

Independent investigations and risk‑analysis sources classify PrecisionFX as unregulated and high‑risk. No legitimate regulatory body (e.g., FCA, ASIC, CySEC) recognises PrecisionFX as authorised. Reports indicate anonymous domain registration, misleading corporate identity, refusal or delay of withdrawals, hidden ownership, and behaviour consistent with scam operations.()

The firm’s public‑facing offers—such as multi‑level referral rewards, automated “robot” trading, guaranteed high returns, and withdrawal “support” commissions—are typical features of fraudulent or Ponzi‑style schemes.()

Pros and cons

Pros

  • None—no verifiable regulatory oversight, investor protection, or credible licensing exists.

Cons

  • Unauthorised by FCA (warning dated 28 March 2025)().
  • Unauthorised by CNMV under Spanish law (warning dated 27 October 2025)().
  • No valid, verifiable regulatory license; company registration appears to reference a dissolved entity().
  • High‑risk behaviour reported: opaque ownership, hidden domain registration, withdrawal issues, aggressive marketing resembling scam patterns().
  • Offers unrealistic guaranteed returns and referral incentives typical of fraudulent schemes().

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