Geographic restriction

Libertex is not available in United States

Local regulations or platform policy prevent residents of United States from opening a Libertex account. We maintain an independent list of brokers that accept clients from your country.

Stock fees

Libertex stock fees

Stock CFDs on Libertex are the largest catalogue by count (1,100+ names) with a flat 0.03% opening commission and a 1:10 multiplier cap. CFDs only — you don't hold real shares, don't get voting rights, and dividends are handled as adjustments. This page covers the cost mechanics and featured stock table.

1,100+ names0.03% commissionUp to 1:10

Featured instruments

Top stock CFDs on Libertex

Twelve major US blue-chips with their multiplier cap (1:10 uniform on these), 0.03% uniform commission, and $20 minimum trade size. The full catalogue spans 1,100+ US and European names plus select international equities.

StockSymbolMax multiplierCommissionMin trade

Multiplier caps step down on smaller-cap and high-volatility stocks (NVDA, RIVN, PLTR, ARM and similar growth names typically at 1:5). Stock CFDs trade during the underlying exchange's hours with some after-hours availability.

Cost mechanics

What you pay on a stock CFD trade

Four mechanics on every stock CFD position. The 0.03% commission is the lowest on the platform alongside indices and commodities; spread tightness depends on exchange session and liquidity of the underlying.

  1. Spread tight in market hours

    Per entry

    Bid-ask gap reflects the underlying exchange's spread plus a small broker markup. Major US blue-chips (AAPL, MSFT, NVDA) tightest during US market hours; pre-market and after-hours wider; non-US stocks during their local session. Holiday gaps wider on Monday open.

  2. 0.03% opening commission

    Per trade

    Flat per-trade fee on multiplied position size. On a $1,000 stock CFD ($100 margin × 1:10): 0.03% = $0.30 commission. Visible on the ticket. Small per trade but compounds over many entries; multi-day buy-and-hold via stock CFD generally beats commission costs but pays overnight financing.

  3. Overnight financing on leveraged holds

    Per night held

    Per-night charge on leveraged stock positions held past US market close. For long positions, you typically pay; financing reflects the cost of leveraged exposure to the underlying. For multi-week stock plays, overnight cost is often the dominant component beyond spread.

  4. Dividend adjustment, not real dividend

    Per ex-date

    When the underlying stock pays a dividend, long CFD positions receive a credit and short positions are debited — but it's a CFD-specific adjustment, not a real dividend. No voting rights, no shareholder benefits, no DRIP. For real share ownership, use a cash-equity brokerage.

Related

Where to read next

Three pages cover surrounding context — the fees hub, commission mechanics (stocks are the canonical commission-explicit asset class), and the demo where stock trades can be tested.

  • Fees hub

    Cross-category cost-disclosure overview — compare stock's 0.03% against crypto's 1% and forex's 0.07% commissions.

    Fees hub
  • Commission mechanics

    Why stocks use explicit commission paired with tight spreads, vs forex/crypto which fold most cost into spread. The standard model for cash equities mirrored into CFDs.

    Commission
  • Demo account

    $50,000 virtual, real-time stock pricing. Test stock CFD execution and commission display on the order ticket before committing capital.

    Demo

FAQ

Stock fee questions

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.