The first structural decision in forex IBcompliance is whether each introducing broker operates as a tied agent of the broker or as an independent entity. This classification determines who bears the regulatory responsibility, what activities the IB can perform, and how the commission relationship is documented. Getting this wrong creates exposure for both sides -- the broker faces regulatory risk, and the IB may be operating unlicensed.
Tied Agent vs Independent IB
Under MiFID II, a tied agent acts on behalf of a single investment firm. The broker takes full responsibility for the tied agent's conduct, and the agent must be registered with the relevant national competent authority. An independent IB, by contrast, operates under its own regulatory authorization (or in a jurisdiction where IB-specific licensing exists) and may work with multiple brokers simultaneously.
Dimension
Tied Agent
Independent IB
Regulatory responsibility
Broker bears full liability
IB holds own license or operates under lighter regime
Broker exclusivity
Must work with one broker only
Can refer clients to multiple brokers
Registration
Must be registered with national authority
May need own license depending on jurisdiction
Activities permitted
Receive/transmit orders, promote services, provide limited advice
Varies by license scope; often limited to referral only
Supervision requirement
Broker must actively supervise
IB self-supervises under own compliance
Commission structure
Typically lot-based rebate from single broker
Can negotiate across multiple brokers
Onboarding complexity
High -- broker must vet and register
Medium -- broker verifies license status
Registration Requirements by Jurisdiction
Registration requirements for forex IBs vary significantly across jurisdictions. In Cyprus, tied agents must be entered on the CySEC public register -- a process that typically takes 4-8 weeks and requires the broker to submit details of the agent's identity, qualifications, and scope of permitted activities. In the UK post-Brexit, the FCA's appointed representative regime requires the principal firm (the broker) to submit Form A for each AR, with processing times of 6-12 weeks.
Cyprus (CySEC): Tied agent registration via CySEC portal; broker submits application with IB identity verification, scope of activities, and supervision plan; 4-8 week processing
United Kingdom (FCA): Appointed representative registration via FCA Connect; Form A submission with fit-and-proper assessment; 6-12 week processing; annual AR attestation required
Germany (BaFin): Tied agent registration under Section 3(2) WpIG; additional cold-calling restrictions apply; BaFin may request interview with proposed agent
Australia (ASIC): Authorized representative appointment; must meet training standards under RG 146; broker must lodge AR details with ASIC within 30 days of appointment
Offshore (SVG, Vanuatu, Seychelles): Typically no formal IB registration requirement; lower compliance burden but also lower credibility with quality IBs
The Registration Process Step by Step
Regardless of jurisdiction, IB registration follows a common pattern. The broker first conducts due diligence on the prospective IB -- identity verification, background checks, assessment of relevant qualifications or experience, and review of the IB's existing client base and marketing methods. This due diligence package forms the basis of the registration application.
Step 1: IB application and identity verification -- collect corporate documents, director IDs, proof of address, beneficial ownership structure
Step 3: Scope definition -- document which activities the IB is authorized to perform (referral only, order transmission, limited advice)
Step 4: Agreement execution -- IB agreement covering commission terms, compliance obligations, termination conditions, and data handling
Step 5: Regulatory filing -- submit registration application to relevant authority with all supporting documentation
Step 6: Supervision plan -- establish monitoring procedures, reporting requirements, and compliance review schedule
Automate IB onboarding document collection through your affiliate management platform. A structured intake workflow that captures all required documents upfront reduces registration delays and ensures no compliance gaps at the application stage.
Common Registration Pitfalls
The most frequent registration failure is scope creep -- an IB registered for referral-only activities who begins providing trading signals, market commentary, or personalized recommendations to clients. This crosses from referral into investment advice, which requires additional authorization. Another common issue is stale registrations: IBs who were registered as tied agents but whose activities, ownership, or compliance status have changed without the broker updating the regulatory filing.
Brokers with large IB networks also face the "headcount surprise" -- a CySEC-registered broker discovers that 40% of their active IBs were never formally registered as tied agents because they were onboarded through an informal process before the compliance team scaled. Retroactive registration is possible but creates audit exposure for the period of unregistered activity.
Key Takeaways
Tied agents operate under the broker's license and require registration; independent IBs hold their own authorization
Registration timelines range from 4 weeks (CySEC) to 12 weeks (FCA) -- plan IB launch timelines accordingly
Due diligence must cover identity, fit-and-proper assessment, scope of activities, and supervision arrangements
Scope creep -- IBs exceeding their registered activities -- is the most common compliance failure in IB programs
Automated onboarding workflows reduce registration delays and ensure complete documentation from day one