Choosing your first trading platform can be quite overwhelming. There are hundreds of options, and most of them can feel similar from the outside looking in. It’s hard to know where to start, and how to approach things. So we decided to do a ranking: weakest and strongest parts of the most popular trading apps (100+ thousands downloads across iOS and Android, 10+ thousand daily active users of the website). Let’s compare them against each other.
Ease of use: native mobile apps win on simplicity
What beginners value is a clean interface, quick onboarding, and the ability to trade with very simple actions (even if there are a lot of complex algorithms running under the hood).
In this, IBKR, despite its global reputation, is a clear outlier. Both the app and the web platform are bloated, full of features beginners (and even pros) rarely use, which makes the entire thing run much slower.
On the other hand, trading platforms with mobile-first approach have been forced to keep themselves lean, are often faster to load, and simple to operate.
Here’s our rankings on how the apps for the popular trading platforms stack up versus each other in this category:
№1. Pocket Option. Easiest platform to learn, has access to simple charts, fast KYC.
№2. Binomo/Quotex. Also beginner-friendly, but fewer ‘simplified’ options for the UI.
№3. Robinhood. Clean design, but large focus on stocks and crypto, as well as prediction markets and now tokenization, which is not something new traders are looking to get into.
№4. IBKR. Extremely not beginner friendly.
Available assets: close call
For many beginners, diversity matters. They want to try all the markets, to figure out which one fits them best. Currency pairs, cryptos, shares, indices, commodities, and so on.
In this category, most popular trading apps perform in a similar way. There are no clear outliers or laggards.
№1. IBKR. Huge variety, especially amongst indices. Large selection of stocks, including emerging markets.
№2. Pocket Option. 130+ assets, across all categories, including unique instruments not found on other comparable platforms.
№3. Robinhood. Good variety of ETFs, stocks, and cryptos, but no commodities or forex pairs for trading at all.
№4. Binomo and Quotex. Fewer assets, and slower to add new ones.
AI features: Pocket Option is far ahead of the curve
Beginners are often looking to simplify their trading. Many hours of looking at charts are no longer as attractive, when AI can do all of that instantly for you, and include sentiment and microstructure indicators in addition to all of that.
This is where Pocket Option right now stands out the most. Most other brokers and trade platforms simply haven’t developed their own AI systems for trading yet. If they have any AI at all, it boils down to ChatGPT-like summaries of the current events and latest news. This can be somewhat helpful to traders, but definitely not game-changing.
№1. Pocket Option. Full-on AI-powered signal generation, with AI actually able to make entries for you. Robust AI that includes volatility filters, event-aware signal scaling, volatility filters, natural-language processing, and various AI-powered insights. No other trading platform currently matches this range of AI tools.
№2. Robinhood. They provide news summaries and basic analytics inside the UI. No trading assistance though.
№3. IBKR. Some simplified AI that scans headlines and expert consensus for you. Might be helpful to some.
№4. Binomo/Quotex. No AI to speak of. Only manual trading, with no extra help.
Deposits, bonuses, and extra events
Beginners often appreciate getting some extra support at the start. In this regard most trading platforms operate very differently.
№1. Pocket Option. Frequent promo codes, seasonal events, bonuses for new users (up to +60%), weekly trading competitions, including on demo accounts, but with real prizes.
№2. Binomo/Quotex. Occasional bonuses, but smaller events with fewer incentives.
№3-№4. Robinhood/IBKR. There are no bonuses or promotions to speak of.
What should you choose as a beginner?
If you like maximum institutional adoption, and you are from the EU → choose IBKR.
If you like regulatory clarity, and are from the US → choose Robinhood.
If you like modern AI tools and active community → choose Pocket Option.
Do you like our list? Which trading platforms or brokers should we include next time?
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