York Markets Review

Updated: June 21, 2026
York Markets
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Fast Facts

Contact Info and Support

Traffic information

CategoryMetricsMeaning
RatingsGlobal Rank-
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Engagement metricsVisits0
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Estimated monthly visitsMarch 20260
April 20260
May 20260
Traffic sourcesSocial-
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About York Markets

York Markets is registered in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines under the Financial Services Authority (FSA) of SVG; this jurisdiction does not license or regulate forex trading activities, meaning the broker operates without oversight from recognized financial regulators. Account types offered include Standard, ECN, Pro, VIP, and Islamic (swap‑free); platforms provided are MetaTrader 4 (MT4), MetaTrader 5 (MT5), and mobile apps; maximum leverage reaches up to 1:1000; minimum deposit is USD 50; trading instruments span over 60 forex pairs, 40+ cryptocurrency CFDs, global indices, commodities, metals, and stock CFDs; scalping, hedging, EAs/robots, MAM, PAMM, news trading, and copy trading are explicitly supported.

York Markets’ regulatory status is unregulated in terms of forex oversight despite its FSA (SVG) registration. No licences from Tier‑1 regulators (such as FCA, ASIC, CySEC) are held. This lack of regulation signifies absence of client fund protection mechanisms, investor compensation schemes, or mandatory segregation of client assets.

Who it’s for

  • Traders seeking high leverage (up to 1:1000) and aggressive trading strategies (e.g., scalping, hedging, EAs).
  • Individuals preferring technically advanced platforms (MT4, MT5, mobile) and a wide range of instruments including forex, crypto, commodities, indices, and CFDs.

Pros and cons

Pros

  • High maximum leverage up to 1:1000, suitable for high‑risk/high‑reward traders.
  • Wide instrument selection across forex, crypto CFDs, commodities, indices, metals, and stock CFDs.
  • Support for advanced trading features such as EAs, scalping, hedging, MAM/PAMM, news trading, and copy trading.

Cons

  • No regulation from recognized financial authorities; registered in SVG which provides no regulatory oversight over forex trading.
  • No investor protection or mandatory client fund segregation mechanisms.

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