Regulator profile · BS
SCB — Securities Commission of the Bahamas
Tracked byBrokerlist Editorial · Independent review teamUpdated
The Securities Commission of the Bahamas (SCB) is the Bahamian financial regulator for capital-markets activities. It is a frequent jurisdiction for offshore forex and CFD brokers serving non-EU/non-US clients.
Brokers in Bahamas accepting residents under SCB- Jurisdiction
- Commonwealth of The Bahamas.
- Founded
- 1995
- Mandate
- Established under the Securities Industry Act. SCB licenses securities firms, mutual funds and investment advisers, supervises conduct and AML compliance, and operates a public registry of all licensees.
- Consumer protection
- No statutory compensation scheme equivalent to the EU ICF or UK FSCS. Client-money segregation is required under SCB rules but enforcement intensity is lower than tier-1 jurisdictions. Negative balance protection is not mandated.
- Retail leverage caps
- No statutory cap. Retail leverage of 1:200 to 1:500 is typical with SCB-licensed providers. Suitability and risk-disclosure obligations apply but are loosely enforced compared to ESMA jurisdictions.
- Public register
- SCB publishes a list of registered firms. The site does not offer a structured search comparable to FCA or ASIC; verifying a specific firm typically requires emailing the SCB directly. Open register ↗
- Dispute resolution
- No independent ombudsman with binding-award powers comparable to the FOS or AFCA. Disputes go through the firm's own complaints process or, ultimately, the Bahamian courts.
- Editor notes
- Major brokers including FxPro Global Markets and others use SCB-licensed entities to onboard clients excluded by EU/UK leverage caps. Treat an SCB licence as offshore: legal cover for the broker, but limited consumer recourse if anything goes wrong.
Brokers we track with a SCB licence
1 brokerEditorial top pick
01Editorial top pick
01FxPro
FCACySECSCBFSCAOpen account at FxPro →- Avg spread
- 0.30pip
- Cost / lot
- $10.00
- Min deposit
- $100
- Max leverage
- 1:500
midpoint of broker rangeincl. $7 commissionEU/UK retail: 1:30 · SCB (Bahamas) entity: 1:500Four diversified regulators (FCA, CySEC, FSCA, SCB) with 18+ years operating history · MT4/MT5 Standard accounts are spread-only at ~1.2 typical pips — only use cTrader or Raw if you want commission-based pricing
Fits ifYou are EU or UK retail and want double tier-1 cover (FCA + CySEC) at one brokerPlatformsMetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, FxPro EdgeFounded in 2006 · Verified Jun 1, 2026
Frequently asked
- Is an SCB licence "real" regulation?
- SCB does conduct AML supervision and basic capital-adequacy oversight, so it is real regulation in the technical sense. But there is no statutory compensation scheme, no leverage caps, no mandatory negative balance protection, and no binding-award ombudsman. Treat SCB as legal cover for the broker's commercial activity, not a meaningful consumer-protection regime.
- Why do brokers like FxPro Global Markets and Pepperstone Limited use SCB?
- SCB licensing lets them onboard clients excluded from EU/UK/AU jurisdictions by retail leverage caps — most clients access leverage above 1:200 there. The same broker group typically operates a tier-1 entity (FCA, ASIC) for European/Australian retail and the SCB entity for the rest of the world.
- How risky is funding an SCB-licensed broker?
- Risk varies sharply by group. Major broker groups with FCA/ASIC entities and audited financial statements (FxPro, Pepperstone, IC Markets via Bahamas) generally honour withdrawals reliably. Pure-offshore brokers without sister tier-1 entities have a worse track record and significantly higher complaints volume on industry forums.
- Can I sue an SCB-licensed broker if there's a dispute?
- Disputes go through Bahamian courts under Bahamian law. Cross-border enforcement is slow, expensive and frequently impractical for retail-sized claims. Some major broker groups offer voluntary internal arbitration that produces faster outcomes than litigation.
- Does Bahamian banking secrecy affect transparency?
- The Bahamas has signed onto the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) and reports tax-residency information to most major countries since 2018. Banking-side secrecy is no longer the protection it was pre-2010. The relevant transparency gap today is the SCB's lighter-touch supervision compared to tier-1 regulators, not bank secrecy.