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How did Interactive Brokers, which has become a global sensation, plan its worldwide financial licenses?
Written by: Yang Qi
In the global brokerage industry, Interactive Brokers (IBKR) has always been something of an outlier. It did not come from a traditional investment bank background, nor is it an internet brokerage—but it can cover 200+ countries and 160+ exchanges, making it one of the brokers with the strongest global trading capabilities.
So the question is:
How does it achieve worldwide compliant expansion through a licensing strategy?
In this article, we will completely break down Interactive Brokers’ underlying logic from the perspective of “architecture design.”
Many people wrongly believe that:
IBKR covers the world through a single top-tier license
But the reality is:
IBKR uses a global compliance architecture based on “multiple jurisdictions and multiple licensed entities”
Put simply:
Each region → one licensed entity
Each market → local regulatory compliance
Global standardization → technology + clearing system
Dissecting the global licensing map
United States: the global clearing and trading core
IBKR’s “heart,” is in the United States.
Core entity: Interactive Brokers LLC
Regulators include:
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC)
Financial Industry Regulatory Authority
(FINRA)
Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC)
License types:
Broker-Dealer (securities broker)
Futures Commission Merchant (futures)
This is the hub of IBKR’s global trading and clearing
All orders, risk control, and the safety of funds—at their core—operate around the U.S. system.
In Europe, IBKR follows a “three-point layout”:
United Kingdom: Interactive Brokers UK Limited
Regulator: Financial Conduct Authority
Ireland: Interactive Brokers Ireland Limited
Serves EU clients (core after Brexit)
Hungary: Interactive Brokers Central Europe Zrt
Cost optimization + regional routing
Through the MiFID framework, IBKR can conduct business across the EU in a “passport-like” way.
IBKR’s strategy in Asia is very clear:
Enter only the core financial centers
Singapore
Entity: Interactive Brokers Singapore Pte Ltd
Regulator: Monetary Authority of Singapore
License: CMS Licence
Hong Kong
Entity: Interactive Brokers Hong Kong Limited
Regulator: Securities and Futures Commission
License: Type 1 / Type 2
Japan / 🇦🇺 Australia
Japan: regulated by the Financial Services Agency
Australia: AFSL (Australian Securities and Investments Commission)
These markets share one common point:
Strict regulation + high-quality investors + strong compliance for funds
What’s most impressive about IBKR is not that it has many licenses—but that:
“Technology is unified, licenses are distributed”
Technology layer (unified globally)
One account system
One trading system
One risk-control model
Legal layer (dispersed locally)
Each region is independently licensed
Customers are assigned to different entities by geographic location
Comply with local regulatory requirements
This creates a huge advantage:
It can expand globally without crossing cross-border regulatory red lines.
Many people think IBKR has already “fully moved into crypto,” but in reality, it is extremely restrained:
For example:
Bitcoin ETF
It still uses:
SEC / SFC / MAS securities licenses
IBKR does not run its own exchange; instead, it partners with others:
Paxos Trust Company
Paxos handles:
Executing trades
Custody of assets
IBKR handles:
The customer entry point
The trading interface
IBKR basically does not touch them
The reasons are very practical:
Bank compliance risk
Extremely high AML difficulty
Regulatory uncertainty
In summary, it really comes down to three points:
It does not use offshore licenses (such as Vanuatu, Seychelles) as the core
It adheres to a frontline regulatory framework
U.S. = clearing hub
Europe = old-money family
Asia = high-net-worth entry point
Securities → do it themselves
Crypto → do it through partnerships
Global → split by regions
If you are doing:
Cross-border brokerage
Web 3 finance
Global licensing layout
IBKR actually provides a “standard answer”
Optimal path (real-world version)
Step 1: Core licenses
United States / Hong Kong / Singapore
Step 2: Regional expansion
European Union (Ireland)
Australia
Step 3: Crypto as a supplement
Connect with licensed exchanges (instead of doing it yourself)
Avoiding pitfalls
Don’t rely only on offshore licenses to go global
Don’t directly get involved in the USDT system
Don’t ignore bank compliance
Conclusion
IBKR’s success is not about having “more licenses,” but about:
Using an engineering approach to break global regulation into manageable modules
At its core, there are two things behind it:
Respect for regulators
Extreme design of the architecture