Learn how FBS supports Forex trading across MT4, MT5, WebTrader, and the FBS mobile app, plus how to choose an account type and open a live or demo account step by step.
Trading Platform Options of FBS (MT4, MT5, cTrader or TradingView) Table of Contents
- The platform lineup at FBS in plain terms
- MetaTrader 4 on FBS: the classic Forex workstation
- MetaTrader 5 on FBS: more structure, more tools, broader coverage
- The FBS mobile app: trading plus account control in one place
- FBS WebTrader: browser-based Forex trading without installs
- What about cTrader on FBS?
- How to choose the right FBS platform for your Forex trading style
- A clean platform setup that works for many Forex traders on FBS
- FBS Account Types and How to Open a Forex Trading Account Step by Step
- Account types at FBS
- The Standard account on FBS
- The Cent account on FBS
- Swap-free option on FBS
- How to open an FBS account from start to first trade
- Opening more than one trading account
- Choosing the right account type for your Forex plan
A Forex trading platform is the software layer that turns your trading plan into live orders. It’s where you place trades, set Stop Loss and Take Profit, monitor margin, manage open positions, and run analysis on price charts. On FBS, your platform choice shapes how you work day to day: whether you rely on desktop execution, mobile trading, browser-based access, or automated strategies.
FBS supports MetaTrader 4 (MT4) and MetaTrader 5 (MT5), plus its own mobile trading app and a browser-based WebTrader experience. FBS also includes TradingView charts inside its mobile app for charting and analysis. At the same time, cTrader is not available on FBS, so if your workflow depends on cTrader’s interface or cTrader-specific tools, you won’t be using them on an FBS account.
The platform lineup at FBS in plain terms
Here’s the clean map of what FBS provides:
- MT4 on FBS: the classic MetaTrader interface for Forex and CFDs, built around charting, manual order placement, and Expert Advisors (automated strategies). FBS offers MT4 across desktop, web, and mobile formats, including MT4 MultiTerminal for managing multiple accounts from one interface.
- MT5 on FBS: the newer MetaTrader generation with expanded market coverage and platform tooling, including more chart timeframes and built-in indicators, plus an integrated economic calendar on the platform page FBS describes.
- FBS mobile app: an all-in-one mobile app built for trading plus account management (deposits, withdrawals, verification, and statistics). It supports trading on demo and real accounts and includes charting and risk settings.
- FBS WebTrader: a browser-based platform meant for quick access without installing software, positioned for trading Forex and other instruments from the browser with analysis and an economic calendar.
- TradingView charts inside the FBS app: FBS states its mobile app includes real-time charts powered by TradingView. This is about charting inside the app—not the same thing as “TradingView as your execution platform.”
- cTrader: not supported at FBS.
Now let’s get specific.
MetaTrader 4 on FBS: the classic Forex workstation
MT4 is still one of the most used Forex trading platforms in retail trading because it’s simple to navigate, stable for everyday chart work, and built around a familiar set of tools: watchlists, charts, indicators, and order tickets. On FBS, MT4 is presented as a platform for trading Forex and other markets, for analyzing markets, and for using Expert Advisors.
What MT4 is best at for Forex traders
Manual trading with a clean workflow
MT4 is designed around fast order placement and straightforward chart interaction. FBS highlights one-click trading on its MT4 page, which matters for scalpers and active intraday traders who want minimal friction between decision and execution.
Algorithmic trading with Expert Advisors
MT4’s automation is based on Expert Advisors (EAs). FBS explicitly positions MT4 as a platform that supports Expert Advisors and algorithmic trading.
In practice, that means:
- You can run rule-based strategies that open/modify/close trades automatically.
- You can automate alerts and trade management logic.
- You can standardize execution when you trade multiple pairs with the same logic.
Managing multiple accounts with MultiTerminal
FBS lists MT4 MultiTerminal and describes it as a way to manage multiple MT4 accounts from a single terminal, which fits traders who operate several accounts or manage separate strategies in parallel.
How MT4 feels in day-to-day Forex work
MT4 is built around a predictable routine:
- You open a chart, add indicators, set templates, and watch key levels.
- You place a market or pending order, define lot size, then attach Stop Loss and Take Profit.
- You monitor open positions in the terminal panel and adjust when needed.
Traders often prefer MT4 when they want a platform that stays focused on core Forex tasks without extra complexity. It’s also common for traders who already have MT4 chart templates, custom indicators, or EA libraries and want continuity.
MetaTrader 5 on FBS: more structure, more tools, broader coverage
MT5 is positioned by FBS as a multi-asset platform that supports Forex and additional markets, with stronger built-in tooling for analysis and strategy support.
What FBS highlights on MT5
On the MT5 page, FBS describes platform features that matter directly to Forex analysis and execution:
- More chart timeframes and indicators: FBS specifies 21 chart timeframes and 38 technical indicators, supporting finer control of multi-timeframe analysis and indicator stacking.
- Economic calendar: FBS describes an in-platform economic calendar for monitoring events and data, which helps traders who plan around macro releases and scheduled volatility windows.
- Improved Expert Advisors: FBS describes “improved Expert Advisors” and upgraded algorithmic trading support on MT5, framing it as a platform for more precise trading algorithms.
- Hedging support: FBS also references the hedging option for positions as part of risk management on MT5.
Practical differences Forex traders notice on MT5
More timeframes = tighter structure for analysis
If your Forex strategy relies on multi-timeframe alignment (for example: entry on a lower timeframe, confirmation on a higher timeframe), more native timeframes can reduce the need for workarounds or custom scripts. FBS’s stated 21 timeframes on MT5 supports that style directly.
More built-in indicators = less dependency on add-ons
Many traders still use custom indicators, but having more built-in indicators makes it easier to set up a clean environment quickly—especially on fresh installations. FBS’s MT5 description explicitly centers technical indicators as a core feature.
A stronger “platform as a trading desk” feel
MT5 is often chosen by traders who want analysis, execution, and monitoring in one environment with fewer external tools. FBS also describes MT5 as supporting multiple markets beyond Forex, which can matter if you trade FX alongside indices, metals, or stocks from the same account and interface.
MT4 vs MT5 on FBS: how to decide without guessing
If your trading is primarily Forex and you value:
- maximum familiarity,
- a lightweight feel,
- and a huge ecosystem of older MT4 tools,
MT4 fits well.
If you prefer:
- more timeframes,
- more built-in indicators,
- broader instrument coverage,
- and a more modern platform layout,
MT5 is the cleaner match.
The FBS mobile app: trading plus account control in one place
FBS positions its mobile app as an all-in-one solution: not only for trading, but also for managing your account. On the FBS app page, the company states the app lets you deposit, withdraw, manage accounts, analyze charts and trading statistics, and trade a large set of instruments, and it supports both demo and real trading.
What the FBS app is built to do
Trade directly from mobile
FBS describes a clear mobile execution flow: pick an instrument, tap Buy/Sell, set lot size, and optionally set Take Profit and Stop Loss before sending the order.
Handle account operations without switching tools
The app is designed to cover funding actions and account management. FBS also describes the app as enabling verification directly through its interface.
Track performance and account statistics
FBS describes trading statistics and analytics inside the app, aimed at traders who want a quick view of performance without exporting data elsewhere.
TradingView charts inside the FBS app: what that actually means
FBS states its app includes real-time market data and TradingView charts and also describes real-time charts powered by TradingView.
For a Forex trader, that means:
- You get TradingView-style charting inside the FBS app interface.
- You can analyze price movement with a charting engine widely used by retail traders.
Who the FBS app fits best
The FBS app is strongest for:
- traders who place and manage trades from their phone,
- traders who want quick funding and account navigation,
- traders who want charting and execution in one mobile experience,
- and traders who don’t want separate apps for trading vs. account operations.
It also pairs well with MT4/MT5 users who do analysis and planning on desktop but still want the ability to monitor and manage trades on mobile.
FBS WebTrader: browser-based Forex trading without installs
FBS offers a browser-based platform described as a web trading solution where you can trade Forex and other instruments directly from the browser.
Why WebTrader exists in a Forex workflow
A web platform is typically chosen for convenience:
- you’re on a work computer where you can’t install MT4/MT5,
- you’re switching devices frequently,
- or you want a fast way to check positions and act without downloading software.
FBS describes WebTrader as “browser-based” and highlights platform-side features such as analysis tools and an economic calendar.
Practical features highlighted for WebTrader
On its WebTrader page, FBS highlights:
- advanced analysis tools
- an economic calendar
- built-in risk tools such as Stop Loss and Take Profit
- negative balance protection mentioned on the page as part of risk controls
The big takeaway: WebTrader is positioned as an access-first option—log in, analyze, place trades, manage risk—without the install step.
What about cTrader on FBS?
Some Forex traders specifically want cTrader because they like its interface style, its approach to order management, or its ecosystem. For FBS accounts, the key point is simple: cTrader is not available.
So your platform decision on FBS is not “MT4 vs MT5 vs cTrader.” It’s MT4, MT5, and FBS’s own app and web platform options.
How to choose the right FBS platform for your Forex trading style
Choosing a platform is not about what sounds “advanced.” It’s about what you actually do every trading day.
If you trade Forex manually and want a familiar desktop layout
Choose MT4 when you want a classic setup for charts, indicator templates, and fast manual execution, and you value a platform that keeps the workflow simple. FBS also supports MT4 MultiTerminal for managing multiple accounts, which matters if you split strategies across accounts.
If you trade multiple markets or want richer built-in analysis tools
Choose MT5 when you want expanded charting structure and a broader platform toolkit. FBS specifically calls out 21 timeframes, 38 indicators, and an economic calendar, which supports a more systematic approach to analysis and planning.
If you need mobile-first execution and account control
Choose the FBS app when you want trading plus account actions in one place: deposits, withdrawals, verification, performance stats, and charting. It’s also the place where FBS explicitly includes TradingView charts inside the app for analysis.
If you need quick access from any computer
Choose WebTrader when you want browser-based trading without downloads, with analysis tools and an economic calendar highlighted by FBS.
A clean platform setup that works for many Forex traders on FBS
Many traders end up with a simple two-layer setup:
- Primary platform for execution and detailed analysis: MT4 or MT5 (desktop)
- Secondary platform for monitoring and quick actions: FBS app (mobile) or WebTrader (browser)
This approach keeps your execution consistent while giving you flexibility when you’re away from your main device. It also lets you use TradingView-style charting inside the FBS app without replacing your main trading terminal.
FBS platform choices for Forex traders are straightforward:
- MT4: classic MetaTrader workflow with Expert Advisors and MultiTerminal support described by FBS.
- MT5: newer MetaTrader platform with more timeframes and indicators and an integrated economic calendar described by FBS.
- FBS app: mobile-first trading plus deposits, withdrawals, verification, and analytics, with TradingView charts inside the app.
- WebTrader: browser trading positioned for fast access, with analysis tools and an economic calendar highlighted by FBS.
- cTrader: not available on FBS.
FBS Account Types and How to Open a Forex Trading Account Step by Step
If you’re choosing a Forex trading account, the goal is simple: pick an account type that matches your risk level, then complete the onboarding steps so you can deposit and trade without delays. With FBS, the account structure is built around a Real account for live trading and a Demo account for practice, plus two main live formats that shape position sizing and risk: the Standard account and the Cent account.
Account types at FBS
FBS provides two account categories at the top level: Real and Demo.
Real account
A Real account is the live trading environment. You deposit funds and trade real market prices with real profit and loss. In the FBS app, Real and Demo accounts are created automatically after registration, and you can switch between them from the account selector.
Real accounts are used to trade Forex and other supported markets, using platforms such as MetaTrader 4 or MetaTrader 5, or by trading directly inside the FBS app interface.
Demo account
A Demo account is funded with virtual currency and is built for training and strategy testing without risking real money. FBS states demo funds are virtual and cannot be withdrawn, and you can add virtual funds to a demo account in the settings.
For Forex traders, demo trading is useful for:
- learning how order types work (market orders and pending orders)
- practicing Stop Loss and Take Profit
- testing position sizing with different leverage
- building routine with charts and indicators
The Standard account on FBS
FBS describes its Standard trading account as an “all-in-one” account that suits traders across experience levels.
What defines the Standard account experience
The Standard account structure is built around the typical retail Forex pricing model: you pay trading costs mainly through the spread, and FBS states there is no commission to open or close positions.
FBS also states key trading-condition points that shape the Standard-account experience, including:
- spreads from 0.7 pips
- initial deposit from $5
- flexible leverage up to 1:3000
- margin call at 40%
- stop-out at 20%
- negative balance protection
In plain terms, the Standard account is designed for normal lot sizing (standard units), normal P/L display, and a typical workflow where you analyze charts, place trades, and manage risk with Stop Loss and Take Profit.
The Cent account on FBS
The Cent account is designed for smaller trade sizing. It’s a live account where balances, profit, and loss are displayed in cents, which makes it easier to trade tiny position sizes and keep real-money risk low.
FBS defines the Cent account mechanics clearly:
- If you deposit $10, it appears as 1000 in the trading platform, meaning 1000 cents.
- Profit and loss are displayed in cents.
- One lot on the Cent account equals 0.01 standard lot, and you can trade as little as 0.0001 standard lot.
- The Cent account has a floating spread and no commission.
- The maximum available leverage is 1:1000.
Why Cent accounts matter for Forex traders
A Cent account is not “demo trading.” It is real execution with real spreads and real profit and loss. The difference is the unit scale. Because the account is denominated in cents, you can open positions that are meaningfully smaller than what many traders use on a Standard account. That is valuable when you want to:
- practice execution with real conditions
- build discipline with Stop Loss rules
- test a strategy with lower cash exposure
- learn how leverage and margin behave in live markets
Swap-free option on FBS
FBS states that swap-free accounts are available.
In Forex, swaps are overnight financing adjustments applied when positions are held beyond the trading day. A swap-free option is built for traders who want to trade without swap charges. On FBS, swap-free availability is presented as an account option rather than a completely separate platform category.
How to open an FBS account from start to first trade
Opening a Forex trading account with FBS follows a clean sequence: register, confirm basic access, verify your profile, create or customize your trading account, then deposit funds and trade.
Register your Trader Area
FBS describes the registration flow through its website as follows:
- Visit the FBS website
- Click “Open an account”
- Register either through a social network option or by entering your data manually
If you register inside the FBS app, FBS describes the same idea: you choose a registration method, and manual registration includes entering an email address, creating a password, selecting your country, and saving your details.
Your Trader Area is the control center where you manage verification, accounts, funding actions, and account settings.
Confirm your email
FBS states that email confirmation is required for access to more advanced operations. The confirmation is done by opening the confirmation email and pressing the confirmation button, and the message can be resent if needed.
Email confirmation matters in practice because it ties account recovery and security workflows to a verified address.
Verify your profile
Verification is the step that unlocks smooth withdrawals and adds security protections around your data and funds. FBS explains verification is needed for safety, to prevent unauthorized access, and for smooth withdrawal.
FBS lists a five-part verification process:
- open the verification flow from the Trader Area
- select the document type and issuing country
- fill in the required fields so they match your official documents
- upload color copies of your identity document and address proof in supported file formats, with total size limits
- submit and track status inside the verification page
FBS specifies you upload a passport or government-issued ID with photo, plus address proof, in formats such as JPG, PNG, HEIC, WEBP, or PDF, with a total size limit stated on the verification guide.
A clean verification submission is simple:
- enter the same identity data shown on your document
- upload clear images where text is readable
- submit both identity and address documents in the supported formats
Create your trading account and choose the platform
After registration in the FBS app, FBS states both Real and Demo accounts are created automatically, and you can switch between them at the top of the screen.
If you want to trade using MetaTrader, the account credentials matter. FBS states you need your account number, trading password, and trading server for MetaTrader, and you can view your trading password on the account page.
On desktop, FBS describes opening an account through an account customization window and choosing a trading platform between MetaTrader 4 and MetaTrader 5.
In practical terms, platform choice affects:
- how you place and manage orders
- what charting and indicators you use daily
- how you run automation (Expert Advisors)
- whether you prefer desktop, mobile, or browser-based access
Pick the account type that matches your risk level
At this point, the choice is usually between:
- Standard account for normal lot sizing and a standard balance format
- Cent account for cent-denominated balances and very small trade sizing
A solid rule for many new Forex traders:
- pick Cent if you want the smallest real-money risk per trade
- pick Standard if you want normal position sizing and you already have consistent risk control
Deposit funds for a Real account
FBS states you need to make a deposit to trade on a Real account.
FBS also states the initial deposit starts from $5, and its minimum deposit guide states the minimum deposit amount to trade is $5, while noting that minimums can vary by payment system.
Once the deposit is credited, you can trade from:
- the FBS app directly, or
- MetaTrader with your account credentials
Start trading and apply risk controls from the first order
FBS highlights key risk-related settings as part of its trading conditions, including margin call and stop-out levels and negative balance protection.
For Forex traders, that translates into daily habits that prevent account damage:
- set Stop Loss before sending the order
- use position size that fits your balance and leverage
- avoid oversized exposure across correlated currency pairs
- track margin usage so you don’t drift into forced liquidation territory
Opening more than one trading account
Many Forex traders run separate accounts for different styles: one for manual intraday trades, one for swing trades, one for testing.
FBS states you can open up to 10 trading accounts of each type (MetaTrader 4 and MetaTrader 5) within one Trader Area if:
- your Trader Area is verified, and
- total deposit across accounts is $100 or more
Otherwise, FBS states you can open only one account for MetaTrader 4 and one account for MetaTrader 5. FBS also states each client can register only one Trader Area.
Choosing the right account type for your Forex plan
Here’s a practical way to decide.
Choose a Demo account when your goal is platform skill
A Demo account fits you when:
- you want to learn MT4/MT5 order placement
- you want to practice chart templates and indicators
- you want to test a strategy structure without financial pressure
Choose a Cent account when your goal is low-risk real trading
A Cent account fits you when:
- you want real execution with very small trade size
- you want to practice risk control with real money
- you want to test strategy ideas with lower cash exposure
Choose a Standard account when your goal is normal trading conditions
A Standard account fits you when:
- you are ready for standard unit sizing
- you want a simple pricing structure centered on spreads
- you want an account positioned by FBS as suitable across trading levels
Please check FBS official website or contact the customer support with regard to the latest information and more accurate details.
Please click "Introduction of FBS", if you want to know the details and the company information of FBS.


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