Fees on Libertex
Libertex fees explained
Every CFD trade on Libertex has a small set of explicit and implicit costs — spread on entry, per-category commission, overnight financing if held past day's end, and currency conversion when account base differs from instrument quote. This page is the cost-disclosure hub. The per-category snapshot below links into deep breakdowns for each asset class.
By category
Snapshot across all nine asset classes
Live counts, modal commission rate, and headline multiplier cap per category. Click any row for the deep per-category fee page with worked examples and real-instrument table.
- Forex0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Crypto0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Stocks0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Indices0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Metals0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Energy0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Agriculture0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- ETFs0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
- Bonds0 instrumentsCommission Spread onlyUp to 1:0Details
Counts are pulled from broker reference data refreshed when the catalogue changes. Specific multiplier caps shown are the per-category maximum across the most liquid instruments; less-liquid pairs and second-tier instruments cap lower. Order ticket on the platform is the authoritative source for any specific trade.
Cost components
What you pay on every trade
Four components combine into total cost on any Libertex CFD trade. The order ticket shows all of them before you confirm — there are no charges added after that point.
Spread
Per entryBid-ask gap paid implicitly on entry. Tightest on major forex (sub-pip on EUR/USD during peak liquidity), wider on exotics, agricultural softs and second-tier crypto. Floats with live market conditions and widens around news. See /spread/ for mechanics.
Commission
Per tradeExplicit per-trade fee, scaled by the multiplied position size. Rates vary by asset class: 1% on crypto (the highest, reflecting hedging cost), 0.07% on forex (the lowest among CFDs), 0.03% on stocks, indices, ETFs, bonds, metals, energy and agriculture. See /commission/ for the full mechanic.
Overnight financing
Per night heldSmall per-night charge on leveraged positions held past day's end. Doesn't matter on intraday trades; compounds heavily on multi-day or multi-week holds. Goes against you on most positions; occasionally positive depending on direction and instrument.
Currency conversion
Per cross-currency tradeApplied when your account base currency differs from the instrument's quote currency. Small per trade, accumulates across many trades — especially trading USD-quoted crypto from a non-USD account. Avoid by funding in the currency you trade most.
Read deeper
Adjacent cost topics
Three pages cover the conceptual deep-dives behind the snapshot — commission mechanics, spread behaviour, and the demo where the cost ticket can be inspected on real instruments without committing capital.
Forex fees deep-dive
The dominant Libertex category by trading volume — 0.07% opening commission, spread mechanics, multipliers up to 1:999 on top majors, worked examples per pair.
Forex feesPayPal availability on Libertex
PayPal funding is currently offered only on the EU/CySEC-regulated Libertex entity. International (non-EU) accounts use alternatives — cards, crypto stablecoins, WebMoney, local payment rails. Honest framing of where it works and why, plus the alternatives.
PayPal detailsDemo account
$50,000 virtual funds, real-time platform. See live spread and commission figures on the order ticket without committing capital.
Demo
FAQ
Fee questions
Costs understood
See the actual figures on the order ticket.
Cost mechanics make sense in the abstract; live spread and commission on the order ticket make them concrete. Try the platform on a demo with $50,000 virtual capital — see what every trade actually costs before committing real funds.
Trading in financial instruments is a risky activity and can bring not only profits, but also losses. The amount of possible losses is limited by the amount of the deposit.