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Best Online Stock Brokers in Europe 2026

Last updated: March 10, 202630 Comments

Best Online Stock Brokers in Europe

I wrote the first version of this article back in 2016 when the options for European investors were genuinely limited. DEGIRO had just launched and was disrupting the market. eToro was mostly known for forex and copy trading. That was it for most of us.

Ten years later, the landscape looks completely different. European retail investors now have access to institutional-grade platforms, commission-free brokers, and automated ETF savings plans that didn’t exist at a retail level a decade ago. The problem isn’t lack of choice — it’s figuring out which broker actually fits how you invest.

This is my 2026 update. I’ll cover the brokers I actually use or would consider using, explain what each one is best for, and give you my honest take on the tradeoffs. I’ve been investing through European brokers for over a decade, primarily in buy-and-hold ETFs with some individual stocks and crypto on the side.

If you’re based in Spain specifically, I have a separate article on the best brokers for Spain that covers the local tax reporting requirements in more detail.

How I Evaluate Brokers

Before getting into the individual brokers, here’s what I actually care about when choosing a platform:

  • Fees — Commission per trade, annual custody fees, currency conversion costs. These compound against you over decades of investing.
  • Asset coverage — Can you access the ETFs and stocks you want? Are they UCITS-compliant for European investors? US-listed ETFs like SPY and QQQ are effectively off-limits for EU retail investors (thanks to PRIIPs), so you need a broker with good UCITS equivalents.
  • Regulation — Is the broker regulated by a serious authority? For Europe, that means MiFID II compliance and regulation under BaFin, CBI, AFM, or equivalent. This matters for investor protection.
  • Tax reporting — Does the broker generate usable annual tax statements? This varies wildly and can be a significant administrative burden if your broker doesn’t help.
  • Platform quality — Can you actually use the thing without wanting to throw your laptop out a window?

Interactive Brokers — Best for Serious Investors

Interactive Brokers is the professional’s choice, and it shows. If you’ve ever tried to access a specific international market, trade options, or get institutional-grade data through a retail broker, you’ve probably hit a wall. IBKR doesn’t have that wall.

European clients are served through Interactive Brokers Ireland Limited, regulated by the Central Bank of Ireland. The platform gives you access to 150+ markets across 33 countries — stocks, ETFs, bonds, options, futures, forex, and more. For a European investor who wants to go beyond vanilla ETFs, nothing else comes close.

Fees

Stock trades on Western European exchanges cost around €3 per trade for typical order sizes, or 0.05% for orders over €6,000. Currency conversion is extremely competitive at roughly 0.002%, which matters a lot if you’re holding USD-denominated assets. There are no hidden platform fees on the standard account.

One thing worth knowing: the account minimum is $0, but IBKR charges a monthly activity fee of $10 (credited back against commissions) for accounts under $100,000. If you’re trading actively, this is a non-issue. If you’re a passive buy-and-hold investor making a couple of trades a year on a smaller portfolio, it adds up.

Who It’s For

Investors with larger portfolios (€50,000+), anyone who needs access to non-European markets, options traders, and anyone who wants the most complete, professionally built platform available to European retail investors. The interface is not beginner-friendly — it’s genuinely complex. But if you’re willing to learn it, you won’t find a more capable platform.

IBKR also offers a Stock Yield Enhancement Program (for accounts above $50,000) that shares 50% of stock lending revenue with you. That’s a small but real passive return on top of your holdings.

Open an Interactive Brokers Account

DEGIRO — Best for Buy-and-Hold Simplicity

DEGIRO is my main broker and has been for years. It’s Dutch, now part of the flatexDEGIRO group, regulated by AFM and DNB, and available in most European countries. The core value proposition is simple: very low fees and no fuss.

I use it for the bulk of my ETF and stock holdings. The interface is clean and functional without being cluttered with features I don’t need. Account setup is straightforward. And the fees genuinely are low — which is the whole point.

Fees

DEGIRO’s ETF Core Selection is where the real value is. For ETFs on the Core Selection list, you pay just €1 per transaction (handling fee) when trading on Tradegate. If you go outside the Core Selection or choose a different exchange, fees jump to €2 per order plus the handling fee. There’s also an annual connectivity fee of €2.50 per exchange, though your domestic exchange and the ETF Core Selection are exempt.

For US stocks, you’re looking at around €0.50 + 0.004 USD per share, which works out very cheap for most trades. These are some of the lowest commission rates available to European retail investors.

What’s Missing

DEGIRO doesn’t offer crypto (if that matters to you), has no automated savings plan feature, and the research tools are minimal. It’s a no-frills execution platform. That’s by design. There’s also no interest paid on uninvested cash.

For a full breakdown of the platform, features, and my experience, see my DEGIRO review.

Who It’s For

Long-term investors across Europe who want cheap, straightforward access to stocks and ETFs without paying for features they’ll never use. If your strategy is buy a diversified ETF portfolio and leave it alone, DEGIRO is hard to beat on cost.

Open a DEGIRO Account

Scalable Capital — Best for Automated ETF Investing

Scalable Capital is a German broker regulated by BaFin, and it has become one of the go-to options for passive investors in Europe — particularly those who want to automate their ETF contributions. The platform is available in Germany, Austria, the Netherlands, Italy, Spain, and France.

The feature that sets Scalable Capital apart is the ETF savings plan (Sparplan). You set a monthly amount, pick your ETFs, and the platform invests automatically on a schedule. Over 2,700 ETFs are available for savings plans, starting from just €1 per month. For someone who wants a set-it-and-forget-it approach to index investing, this is genuinely excellent.

Fees

Scalable Capital has two main tiers:

  • Free Broker — All savings plan executions are €0. Individual trades on European Investor Exchange (EIX) or gettex are €0.99 per order. Trades in PRIME partner ETFs (Amundi, iShares, DWS Xtrackers) above €250 are also free.
  • PRIME+ Broker (€4.99/month) — Unlimited commission-free trading above €250 order size. Includes all savings plans free. Better value if you’re trading more actively or making larger individual purchases.

For a passive investor making monthly automated contributions, the Free Broker tier is unbeatable — €0 on every savings plan execution means the only cost you’re paying is the ETF’s TER.

Who It’s For

Passive investors who want to automate their ETF investing with monthly contributions. Also good for beginners who want a clean, modern app without the complexity of Interactive Brokers. If your strategy is “invest €500 per month into a world index ETF and don’t think about it,” Scalable Capital makes that trivially easy.

Open a Scalable Capital Account

eToro — Best for Beginners and Social Trading

eToro is the platform everyone’s heard of, and for good reason — it has over 30 million users worldwide and was genuinely one of the first platforms to push commission-free stock trading into the mainstream for European investors.

The social and copy trading features are eToro’s most distinctive offering. You can browse other investors’ portfolios, see their returns and risk scores, and copy their trades automatically. For someone who’s new to investing and wants to learn by following experienced investors, this is a real differentiator. No other major broker does this well.

Fees

eToro advertises zero-commission stock and ETF trading, and that’s technically accurate — they make money on the spread instead. For most straightforward stock trades this is fine, but it’s worth understanding. The bigger cost consideration for European investors is currency conversion: eToro operates in USD, so if you’re depositing in EUR, there’s a conversion fee built into your deposits and withdrawals (around 150 pips, or roughly 1.5%). For frequent traders this is a meaningful cost.

ETF trading is genuinely free with no spread markup. eToro also offers crypto, which is natively integrated into the same platform — useful if you want exposure to Bitcoin or Ethereum without opening a separate account.

What to Watch

eToro has come a long way on regulation — it holds licences across multiple jurisdictions including CySEC for EU clients. But the spread-based model and USD conversion costs mean it’s not the cheapest option for pure long-term ETF investing. For someone investing €1,000/month into index funds year after year, those costs add up noticeably versus DEGIRO or Scalable Capital.

Where eToro shines is as a gateway: it’s easy to use, has a good mobile app, covers stocks, ETFs, and crypto in one place, and the social features make it more engaging for investors who are still building their knowledge. See my full eToro review for a deeper breakdown.

Who It’s For

Beginners who want an accessible, all-in-one platform. Investors who want to explore social and copy trading. Anyone who wants stocks, ETFs, and crypto under one roof without managing multiple accounts.

Open an eToro Account

Trading 212 — Worth Knowing About

Trading 212 doesn’t have an affiliate relationship on this site, so I’ll keep this brief — but it deserves a mention because it’s genuinely popular and has real strengths.

Trading 212 is commission-free across stocks and ETFs with no platform fee and no inactivity fee. The fractional shares feature is excellent — you can invest in any stock from as little as €1, which makes it accessible if you’re starting with small amounts. The AutoInvest / Pies feature lets you build a portfolio and auto-invest contributions proportionally — similar to Scalable Capital’s savings plan concept but more flexible in how you structure your portfolio.

They also pay interest on uninvested cash, which DEGIRO doesn’t. The FX fee is 0.15% on currency conversions, which is very reasonable.

Available across most of Europe. Regulated by the FCA (UK) and CySEC (EU). If you’re based in the UK it’s particularly compelling given the ISA account option. Worth looking at if none of the brokers above feel like the right fit.

Key Considerations for European Investors

Choosing a broker isn’t just about trading fees. There are a few European-specific factors that will affect every investor here.

MiFID II and UCITS ETFs

Under EU regulations (specifically PRIIPs), European retail investors cannot buy US-domiciled ETFs like SPY, QQQ, or VTI. You need UCITS-compliant equivalents — funds domiciled in Ireland or Luxembourg. The good news is that UCITS equivalents exist for virtually everything worth owning: IWDA (iShares Core MSCI World), VWCE (Vanguard FTSE All-World), CSPX (iShares Core S&P 500), and so on. All brokers on this list give you access to these.

Withholding Tax on Dividends

Where an ETF is domiciled affects the withholding tax on dividends. Ireland-domiciled funds benefit from the US-Ireland tax treaty (15% withholding on US dividends vs. 30% for Luxembourg-domiciled funds). This is why most serious European ETF investors prefer Ireland-domiciled funds. Check your ETF’s ISIN — IE-prefixed means Ireland-domiciled.

The W-8BEN Form

If you’re investing in US stocks directly, your broker should ask you to complete a W-8BEN form. This certifies you’re a non-US person and reduces US withholding tax on dividends from 30% to 15% (for most EU countries with a tax treaty). Make sure your broker handles this — DEGIRO and Interactive Brokers both do.

Currency Conversion Costs

Many European investors overlook this. If you’re investing in USD-denominated assets and your account is in EUR, every trade triggers a currency conversion. IBKR’s 0.002% rate is best-in-class. eToro’s ~1.5% conversion cost on deposits is at the expensive end. For a long-term investor making regular contributions, this difference is significant over time.

Annual Tax Statements

Every European country handles investment taxation differently. What they have in common is that you need accurate records of dividends received, trades executed, and — in some countries — unrealized gains. IBKR produces detailed and usable annual reports. DEGIRO provides annual statements that are serviceable for most tax purposes. eToro’s tax reporting has improved but can still be a pain for high-volume traders.

My Setup and Recommendation

Here’s how I actually do it: DEGIRO is my primary broker for buy-and-hold ETF investing. Most of my portfolio sits there — core UCITS ETF positions that I add to over time and rarely touch. The fees are low, the platform does what I need, and I’ve never had a problem with it.

If I were starting fresh today with a larger portfolio or more complex needs, I’d take a serious look at Interactive Brokers. The platform complexity is real, but so is the cost efficiency at scale and the depth of market access. For serious long-term investors, IBKR is the grown-up choice.

For someone brand new to investing who wants to start small and automate contributions, Scalable Capital’s savings plan feature makes the whole process nearly frictionless. Pick a world ETF, set a monthly amount, and let it run.

eToro is fine for beginners who want an accessible entry point, and it’s particularly useful if you want stocks, ETFs, and crypto in one place without juggling multiple accounts.

The honest answer is that there’s no single best broker for every European investor. It depends on your portfolio size, how actively you invest, which asset classes you want, and how much you care about platform sophistication versus simplicity. But any of the four main brokers on this list is a serious, regulated option — far better than what was available when I started investing in Europe.

eToro is a multi-asset investment platform. The value of your investments may go up or down. Your capital is at risk. Past performance is not an indication of future results. Trading history presented is less than 5 complete years and may not suffice as basis for investment decision. Copy Trading does not amount to investment advice. Cryptoasset investing is highly volatile and unregulated in some EU countries. No consumer protection. Tax on profits may apply.

Filed under: Money, Stock market

How to Migrate from Zoho Mail to Gmail

Last updated: April 27, 201910 Comments

choosing-perfect-email-address

I recently decided to migrate one of my brands’ email accounts from Zoho Mail to Gmail. Google Apps has many more features than just Gmail and we were also having some spam issues with Zoho Mail so the move was a no-brainer really.

The only disadvantage is that Gmail is not free for business use with your own domain, but the price is worth paying, especially if you don’t require a large number of mailboxes/users.

In any case, my biggest headache was how to replicate the same mailboxes I had on Zoho Mail and move the thousands of emails from Zoho to Gmail. At first, I looked at export/import facilities in both services, however, it turned out that the solution is much simpler.

The best way to migrate is to install a mail package on your laptop, in my case I used the free Thunderbird. There are many others, take your pick or use whatever you have installed already.

Secondly, set up the Zoho Mail inboxes on Thunderbird with an IMAP connection. You also need to create the inboxes in Gmail and enable IMAP (it’s off by default). Then, also set up the Gmail accounts in Thunderbird. Once they can all connect it’s time to work the magic.

Let’s say I have a Zoho Mail inbox named [email protected] and I have set up the same one on Gmail entitled [email protected]. Once they are both able to connect from Thunderbird, what I do is access the Zoho Mail inbox, select all emails, then drag and drop into the same inbox on Gmail. That way the emails will be moved from Zoho Mail’s inbox to the Gmail one. That’s it, easy as pie.

Once you transfer all the emails in this manner, you will also need to set up folders (labels in Gmail) and filters. I suggest you set up the filters within Gmail itself rather than your email client on the laptop. That way you can switch clients at a later stage without having to set up the filters again. Gmail also has a great filtering system so there is no reason to use anything else.

It’s really easy to migrate from one email host to another using IMAP connections. The same procedure described above can, in fact, be used to migrate between any two email hosts that support IMAP.

If you want to keep using free Gmail and still want to use your domain name in your email, you can use the Improv.mx forwarding service.

Filed under: Tech

iCloud Explained: Storage, Backup, Photos and iCloud Drive

Last updated: March 12, 20262 Comments

iCloud

Apple’s iCloud ecosystem has grown significantly over the years, but it can still be confusing — especially if you’re trying to understand how backup, storage, photos, and file sync all fit together. Here’s a clear breakdown of what each component does and how to use them effectively.

[Read more…]

Filed under: Tech

Should You Open Separate PayPal Accounts for Each of Your E-Commerce Stores?

Last updated: March 11, 202622 Comments

paypal_logo

PayPal remains one of the most popular ways of accepting online payments, so you’re bound to be using it if you’re involved in online business. A question that comes up sooner or later is whether you should open a separate business account for each of your brands or products.

Separation of Personal and Business PayPal Accounts

First of all, I want to clarify that you should, first of all, have separate personal and business PayPal accounts. This is allowed by PayPal as detailed in this FAQ. You shouldn’t be mixing your personal transactions with those of your business. You should keep separate personal and business bank accounts and you should also do likewise with PayPal. Then link the personal PayPal account to your personal credit card or bank account, and the business PayPal account to your business credit card or bank account.

PayPal Business account

With that out of the way, the next stage as you continue to grow your business will be launching and selling more than one product. With revenue from both of these products coming in through the same PayPal account, there can be some challenges.

The first challenge you will encounter is that of accounting. Since you will be seeing the total amount of revenue generated from both your businesses, it will be hard to visualise at a glance how much of that revenue belongs to each business. Of course you will also hopefully have good reporting facilities from the e-commerce platform you are using which will somewhat compensate for this disadvantage. Moreover, if you are accepting payments through other systems apart from PayPal (e.g. Stripe/Braintree), you shouldn’t be looking at the revenue stats in PayPal as a measure of how you’re doing because that figure will be missing all other payments that would have come through via the other payments systems.

What to do if you have a separate company for each brand

As long as you have separate companies, there should be no issue at all. A company is legally distinct from its owner. Each can and should have its own bank account, credit card, email, etc.

As a result, you will be able to sign each one up individually at PayPal. You will be the representative of your company for each PayPal account, but the PayPal accounts will each belong to the respective company.

And if you don’t have a separate company for each brand?

Here’s when things get tricky. Many business owners create a company and then sell a number of products/brands from that one company. This is usually when the question arises about whether they should have separate PayPal accounts for each product/brand.

There are a number of pros and cons for each way to go and no clear answer to this question.

If you are planning to spin off and sell a particular product or brand, you should always create a separate PayPal account for it and treat it as a separate entity from the rest of your business. During the selling process and the due diligence period, it will be so much easier for you and the buyer if you have a separate PayPal account housing the transaction of just that product that you will be selling off. Otherwise, you will have to filter things that can get messy, plus you won’t be able to just transfer the ownership of that product’s PayPal account to the new owner, which is a disadvantage for them as they won’t get the history of that account. This will affect your selling price so keep that in mind.

For the new owner, having a PayPal account that has been previously set up and having everything working smoothly is a very important bonus. The changeover will be easier and they will have a handy history of every transaction recorded from the inception of that product. Moreover, you have to also keep in mind that PayPal allows lower transaction rates depending on your monthly volume of sales.

Another thing to consider is whether you will have subscriptions and recurring payments processed through PayPal. If that’s the case I would recommend using two separate Paypal accounts as it will be very messy or downright impossible to move over those subscriptions to a new account in the future if needed (for example in the case of a sale of one of the products to a new owner).

Most e-commerce software systems provide additional and handy functionality through PayPal’s IPN system. This can allow you to do things like give refunds from the e-commerce system itself rather than having to log in to your PayPal account to process the refund. If you use PayPal Standard, you can use a single account for multiple sites. If you use PayPal Express, you need to use a separate account for each site. This is because PayPal Standard supports multiple IPN URLs while PayPal Express only supports one.

Now if you decide to go for one PayPal account to cover all your products, it might be a good idea to still pass your payments through separate email addresses linked to the same PayPal account. This is very useful if you are receiving payments from several different sources. To give you a concrete example, imagine a blog having affiliate arrangements with tens or hundreds of product vendors. If they all have their own affiliate systems, as is frequently the case, you would have signed up with each vendor and gave them your PayPal email address. Now if in the future you sell that blog, the new owner would have a very tedious job having to log in to each of these affiliate accounts and change the PayPal email address to his instead of yours. However if you had used an additional email address to your company’s PayPal account, the transition would be much smoother. You would just have to unlink that email address from your company’s PayPal account, and concurrently the new owner would add that email address to his company’s PayPal account. From that moment onwards all payments will reach the new owner’s account, without having to change any settings on the vendors’ side.

An important pro for having just one account for all your brands (if you don’t plan to sell in the immediate future) is easier management. You don’t have to log in to several PayPal accounts to check on things, you just have one account. Another potential issue with having multiple accounts is which account to process expenses from. If it’s not easy for you to associate expenses to a particular product, it might be a struggle to choose which PayPal account to use for them. For example, if you are using a backup service for all your product sites, and you want to make an automatic monthly payment, which PayPal account will you use if you have a number of them? Having just one account eliminates this problem altogether.

Another thing to consider is that PayPal assigns different commission rates based on the volume of transactions per month that an account generates. Thus if you have everything going into one account there might be a better chance for you to get the lowest rate than if you separate the accounts and hence lower the volume of each account.

Hopefully, this is helpful to you when deciding whether to open separate PayPal accounts for each product you own or not. Please leave a comment if you have any further questions and I’ll do my best to answer them.

  1. Are You Losing out from PayPal’s Exchange Rates?
  2. Which PayPal Account is Best for You?
  3. Changing Your PayPal Withdrawal Currency
  4. Understanding PayPal Cross Border Fees
  5. How to Withdraw From PayPal into a Maltese Bank Account
  6. Withdrawing Money From PayPal for Non-US Accounts
  7. Which PayPal E-Commerce Checkout Service Should You Use?
  8. Should You Open Separate PayPal Accounts for Each of Your E-Commerce Stores?
  9. PayPal VS Wise Borderless
  10. Linking Virtual Bank Accounts and Cards to PayPal (Revolut, Wise etc)
  11. How to Change Ownership of a PayPal Account

Filed under: Business

Email Addresses to Set Up When Opening a Company

Last updated: March 11, 202651 Comments

choosing-perfect-email-address

When opening a company one of the first things you should do is choose an email provider. My favorite is Google Apps for Work. You can also use Zoho Apps if you are a small business and want a totally free solution.

Once you’ve got your mail set up you want to set up individual email accounts.

Personal Email Accounts

Each person in the company should, of course, have their own personal email address that they can use on a daily basis for internal and external communication. This is the email address that they can put on their business cards and also use for logging into the various tools that the company uses.

Tools like Slack are now aiming at killing email for internal communication, and they’re having a great of success. However, email is not going away anytime soon as there are many more uses for it apart from internal communication.

For personal email accounts I recommend using this format:

[email protected]

In my case, for example, I would use [email protected]. If the person has a really long name or surname you can use the shortened version or even set up an alias to that account. For example, you can have the mailbox named [email protected] but then also set up an alias for [email protected] and emails sent to that alias will also end up in the person’s inbox. This also applies to people who have a name that’s hard to spell.

Read more: How to start a blog

Need hosting? I recommend Bluehost for starting out with your website. You can read my article on how to create your first website and sign up to Bluehost; it’s a reliable and cheap hosting service that won’t let you down.

Some companies prefer to just use the firstname@ option and omit the last name. This works for very small companies but you will soon run into problems when the second Joe joins your team. You’ll soon end up with a mess, with some people using their first name only and others having to use their first and second names or something unsightly like joe2@.

My recommendation is, therefore, to start right away with the firstname.lastname@ combination. If you get two people with the same first and last names, you can use introduce the initial for their middle name or something similar. For example if you have two people named Joe Smith in your company, the second one can use [email protected].

Generic Email Accounts

Next, you will want to set up a few email accounts to be used for mostly administrative, support, billing and as a first point of contact with your company. Make sure you cover all the business functions of your company.

Here are a few essential ones to start off:

  • admin@ for administrative purposes such as being a Google Apps admin
  • support@ for your helpdesk
  • billing@ for billing and payments
  • hello@ as a general point of contact
  • careers@ for job applications
  • domains@ for domain management

[Read more…]

Filed under: Business

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