The Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS) is a statutory safety net that protects UK clients of authorised financial firms when those firms fail. For forex traders, understanding the precise mechanics, limits, and compliance implications of this £85,000 protection is not optional—it is essential for capital preservation and regulatory awareness. This article explains how the FSCS operates within the broader framework of UK financial regulation, what the £85,000 limit actually covers, and how forex traders should structure their accounts to maximise protection without falling into common misinterpretations.
The FSCS was established under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 and is funded by levies on authorised firms. Its core purpose is to compensate eligible claimants if a regulated firm becomes insolvent, is declared in default, or cannot meet its financial obligations. For retail forex traders, this typically applies when a broker holds client money in segregated accounts—as required under the FCA’s Client Assets Sourcebook (CASS)—but then misappropriates those funds or goes bankrupt. The £85,000 limit is per person, per firm, and covers deposits held with the firm, including unrealised profits and open trade equity. Crucially, it does not cover investment losses from trading activity; it only protects the cash and assets you have entrusted to the broker.
One of the most critical compliance nuances is the difference between coverage for deposits under the FSCS and coverage under the Temporary High Balance (THB) regime. The THB was introduced for specific events, such as property sales or insurance payouts, and provided protection up to £1 million for a limited period. However, for standard forex accounts, the £85,000 limit is the primary safeguard. The FSCS also does not cover currency risk, exchange rate fluctuations, or any losses arising from market volatility. If your broker goes under while you have an open position, the FSCS will compensate you for the cash value of that position at the time of default, but not for subsequent moves in the market.
The interaction between the FSCS and the European Deposit Guarantee Scheme Directive (DGSD) is also worth understanding, particularly for UK traders who may have accounts with brokers headquartered in other jurisdictions. Post-Brexit, the UK’s FSCS applies only to firms authorised by the Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) or the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). If you trade with a broker registered in Cyprus, for example, you would fall under the Cyprus Investor Compensation Fund (ICF), which has a lower coverage limit of €20,000. This jurisdictional gap is a common trap for casual traders who assume all EU-based protection is equivalent to UK levels. Compliance with FCA rules requires that your broker explicitly identifies which compensation scheme applies to your account in its client agreement.
Advanced traders should also be aware of the aggregation rules under the FSCS. If you hold multiple accounts with the same broker—perhaps a personal forex account, a joint account, and an ISA—the FSCS treats you as one claimant. The £85,000 limit applies across all accounts held with that firm. However, if you have accounts with different legal entities within the same corporate group, coverage may be aggregated if the entities are not independently regulated. This is a compliance grey area that the FCA has addressed in case law, and it underscores the importance of verifying that your broker’s regulatory permissions are separate per entity.
The process of claiming under the FSCS is straightforward but time-sensitive. Once a broker is declared in default by the FCA, the FSCS will notify eligible clients and begin processing claims. You must provide proof of your identity, your account balance at the time of default, and any supporting documentation. The FSCS aims to pay out within three months, but complex cases—particularly those involving segregated accounts—can take longer. Note that the £85,000 limit is not per account type but per individual. If you are a professional trader or a high-net-worth individual, you may not be eligible for FSCS protection at all, as professional clients are excluded from this scheme.
A common compliance mistake among moderately active forex traders is assuming that holding multiple accounts with different brokers automatically increases total protection. In reality, you are protected up to £85,000 per firm. If you hold £50,000 with Broker A and £50,000 with Broker B, both are fully protected individually. But if you hold £100,000 with Broker A, only £85,000 is covered. The tactical implication is clear: diversifying your broker relationships is not just about risk management—it is a direct method of expanding your FSCS coverage. However, you must ensure each broker is FCA-authorised, as unregulated brokers offer zero FSCS protection.
Finally, the FSCS does not cover losses from fraud or mis-selling beyond the insolvency of the firm itself. If a broker steals client money directly, the FSCS will cap compensation at £85,000. This is why regulatory compliance around client money segregation—specifically whether the broker uses pooled or individual segregated accounts—is a critical due diligence step. Always verify your broker’s FCA register status, its CASS arrangement, and whether it holds client money in a UK bank account subject to ring-fencing.
In summary, the FSCS is a valuable but limited safety mechanism for UK forex traders. Understanding the £85,000 cap, the aggregation rules, the jurisdictional differences, and the exclusions for professional clients empowers you to structure your trading capital intelligently. Compliance is not just about following rules—it is about using those rules to your advantage. Do not let a broker’s failure destroy your trading capital. Know your protection, verify your regulatory coverage, and always trade within the bounds of the compensation scheme that truly applies to you.