Deposit Method · last checked July 2, 2026
Bitcoin Forex Brokers
This page explains how to check whether a broker truly supports Bitcoin funding, what deposit support does and does not mean, and the main risks to verify before sending BTC to a trading account.
- Based on official broker and payment-source research
- Deposit support is never assumed to mean withdrawal support
- Focused on verifiable Bitcoin funding rules, not marketing claims
What Bitcoin support means on a forex broker page
For this topic, Bitcoin support means a broker or its payment stack publicly shows that BTC can be used to fund a live trading account, or that the broker explicitly accepts crypto funding through a named method such as direct crypto transfer or an approved crypto payment rail. A general Bitcoin trading page is not enough on its own: trading BTC as a CFD does not prove that BTC can be used to deposit money into the account.
Payment-method broker shortlist: Bitcoin
| Broker | Comparison score | Funding evidence | Regulator signals | Review |
|---|---|---|---|---|
Capital.com | 73.5 | Bank cards, Apple Pay, Wire transfer, Other payment methods referenced on official pages | CySEC, Securities Commission of The Bahamas | Read review |
FP Markets | 67 | cards, bank transfer, Skrill, Neteller | ASIC, CySEC, FSCA | Read review |
iFOREX | 63.5 | Credit/debit cards, Bank wire transfers, Alternative payment solutions (availability varies by country) | British Virgin Islands Financial Services Commission, Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) | Read review |
| 61 | Card, Bank wire, Skrill, Neteller | Financial Services Commission (FSC) of Mauritius, Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) of South Africa | Read review | |
TopFX | 58 | Multiple payment methods are shown publicly, including crypto and several local payment rails | Financial Services Commission (BVI), CySEC (legacy entity reference) | Read review |
FXPrimus | 51 | Bank wire, Local bank, E-wallets, Cryptocurrency | Vanuatu Financial Services Commission (VFSC), Cyprus Securities and Exchange Commission (CySEC) | Read review |
Funding support can vary by legal entity, country and client status. Confirm the current cashier/payment page before depositing. Scores last checked July 2, 2026.
Broker examples with documented Bitcoin or crypto-funding evidence
| Broker | documented status | What the source supports | What remains to verify |
|---|---|---|---|
Exness | Partial support from official payments pages | Exness publicly states that it offers global and local payment methods for deposits and withdrawals, that deposits and withdrawals can be processed 24/7, and that payment-method details such as time, fees, and limits are shown in the Personal Area. Its official pages also state that if a deposit payment method is unavailable during withdrawal, clients should contact support for an alternative solution. | The public pages reviewed do not clearly confirm Bitcoin as a named deposit method on the global payments page, so BTC funding should not be assumed without checking the current Personal Area and entity-specific payment list. |
| BIBinance | Crypto funding context only | Binance’s official Academy guide explains that Binance supports direct crypto deposits, card purchases, bank transfers, and P2P flows, and that withdrawals can be made in crypto or fiat depending on region. | Binance is a crypto exchange, not a forex broker, so this is context only and should not be treated as a forex-broker Bitcoin deposit confirmation. |
Admiral Markets | Not Confirmed From The Sources Reviewed | The source set reviewed showed Bitcoin CFD product documentation, which confirms trading exposure to Bitcoin rather than Bitcoin account-funding support. | Current deposit and withdrawal support for BTC was not confirmed from official payment pages in this research set. |
This table is conservative by design. A broker appears here only when the current official source set supports the payment-related claim. Product pages about Bitcoin trading are not counted as deposit support.
Deposit support versus withdrawal support
Deposit support and withdrawal support are separate permissions. A broker may accept Bitcoin deposits but restrict withdrawals to the original funding route, bank transfer, card refund, or another method. Exness, for example, states that if a deposit payment method is unavailable during withdrawal, clients should contact support for an alternative solution, and it also says withdrawal details depend on the selected payment method in the Personal Area. That is why every broker should be checked for both directions individually.
Why Bitcoin funding is different from bank or card funding
Bitcoin funding can move faster than some traditional rails, but it also shifts responsibility to the sender. The user must verify the address, network, amount, and any conversion step before sending. If the broker converts BTC into fiat or into an account base currency, the final credited amount may differ from the amount sent because of market price movement and provider charges.
What to verify before opening a Bitcoin-funded trading account
Check whether the broker supports direct BTC deposits or only a crypto payment processor; whether withdrawals are allowed back to BTC; the minimum and maximum funding limits; expected processing times; whether extra identity checks are required; whether third-party wallets are allowed; and whether the broker restricts the method by country or entity. For high-risk payment routes, the most useful public pages are the broker’s deposit/withdrawal page, client agreement, and fee schedule.
How we treat weak or incomplete public evidence
If a broker publishes a Bitcoin-themed page but does not clearly say that BTC can fund a live account today, we do not list it as Bitcoin-supported. If a broker only mentions cryptocurrencies in trading products, we treat that as product coverage, not payment support. This page therefore prioritizes verifiable funding evidence over broad broker claims.
Common questions
Does a broker’s Bitcoin CFD page mean it accepts Bitcoin deposits?
No. A Bitcoin trading or CFD page only shows that the broker offers Bitcoin as a product. It does not prove that BTC can be used to fund the account. Deposit support must be confirmed on a current payments page or in the broker’s funding terms.
Can I assume withdrawal support if a broker accepts Bitcoin deposits?
No. Withdrawal support must be checked separately. Some brokers allow deposits through one route and withdrawals through another, or require withdrawals to follow anti-money-laundering rules and the original funding path.
What fees should I check before sending Bitcoin to a broker?
Check on-chain network fees, any broker deposit or withdrawal charges, conversion fees if BTC is converted to fiat, and potential exchange spreads. Some brokers also apply method-specific limits or processing charges at the payment-provider level.
Why does KYC matter for Bitcoin-funded trading accounts?
Brokers commonly require identity verification before allowing deposits, withdrawals, or both. This is especially important for crypto-linked funding because compliance checks may affect limits, timing, and whether the withdrawal route is available.
What is the biggest risk with Bitcoin deposits?
The biggest operational risks are sending to the wrong address, choosing the wrong network, and not understanding that blockchain transfers are generally irreversible. Market volatility is the next major risk if the broker converts BTC into fiat at the time of crediting.
Are Bitcoin deposits available in every country?
No. Availability can vary by broker entity, local regulation, payment-provider rules, and AML controls. Always check the country-specific payments page or client area for the exact legal entity you will open the account with.
What should I do before I deposit Bitcoin into a broker account?
Confirm the exact deposit method name, verify the wallet address and network, read the withdrawal rule first, check the minimum amount, and complete KYC if required. If any step is unclear, contact the broker before sending funds.
Check the details yourself
These are the pages we relied on. Read them before you open an account or send money anywhere.






