Australia · ASIC Regulated

Forex License in Australia

A tier-one badge that ASIC now guards closely. Finjuris guides brokers through the Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) — high in prestige, high in capital, and not handed out lightly.

9–15
Months to License
A$1M
Min. Net Tangible Assets
30%
Corporate Tax Rate
30:1
Major FX Leverage Cap

For years an ASIC license was a favourite of global forex brands: respected, English-speaking, commercially friendly. It is still highly respected — but the easy days are over. After a wave of retail-CFD reform, ASIC has lifted capital, tightened conduct and become markedly more selective about who issues leveraged products to retail clients.

The result is a license that means more precisely because it is harder to get. Finjuris maps the realistic path and tells you candidly whether Australia is the right door, or whether a different jurisdiction gets you to market faster.

Legal Basis

Regulatory Authorisation Framework

A forex/CFD broker must hold an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) under the Corporations Act 2001, with specific authorisations to deal in, and make a market in, derivatives and foreign-exchange contracts. Margin FX and CFDs are derivatives in Australian law — they do not settle immediately — so offering them to Australian clients without an AFSL is a criminal offence under section 911A. What you may do is defined by the authorisations on your license.

Read This First

A Frequently Overlooked Regulatory Requirement

This is the single most misunderstood point about Australia, and it reshapes your capital plan entirely.

Common Misconception

STP Does Not Save You Here

Many brokers assume that running an agency / straight-through-processing model — hedging every client trade with a liquidity provider — keeps them out of the heavy capital bracket. In Australia it does not.

If your firm faces the client as principal (issues the contract to them), ASIC classifies you as a retail OTC derivative issuer — even if you hedge 100% of your book. That classification triggers the full financial regime: net tangible assets of the greater of A$1,000,000 or 10% of average revenue, half in cash, half in liquid assets, with quarterly cash-flow projections and trigger-point reporting. Plan your capital around this from day one.

Classification

ASIC's Three Models

Most retail forex/CFD brokers fall into the first row whether they intend to or not. Finjuris confirms your classification before you build a capital plan around the wrong one.

Your Model Capital Regime What It Means
Retail OTC Derivative Issuer (Principal — A-Book or B-Book) NTA: greater of A$1M or 10% of average revenue Applies even to fully-hedged STP brokers facing clients as principal; 50% cash / 50% liquid, quarterly projections.
Arranger / Intermediary (True Agent) Lighter (ASLF-based) A genuine agent not issuing contracts; lower capital, but a narrow model in practice for retail FX.
Wholesale-Only Reduced obligations Dealing only with wholesale/sophisticated clients eases conduct and some financial requirements — but excludes the retail market.

Which ASIC category are you really in?

Get a Structuring Assessment
Why ASIC

The Strategic Value of an AFSL

Tier-One Trust

ASIC sits alongside the FCA and ASIC-equivalent regulators in client and partner perception with a credibility tier above offshore licenses.

Banking & PSP Access

An AFSL opens institutional banking and payment relationships that offshore brokers struggle to secure.

A Sophisticated Home Market

Direct access to Australia's active, affluent retail trading base and the wider APAC region.

Conduct Credibility

ASIC's product-intervention regime — leverage caps, negative-balance protection — protects clients and, by extension, your brand.

Common-Law Stability

A predictable legal system and a mature, well-understood licensing framework under RG 166.

Compliance Checklist

Foundational Requirements for AFSL Approval

Licensing Requirement Regulatory Expectation Importance
An Australian Company A local company applying for the AFSL with the right derivatives and FX authorisations. The licensed legal entity.
Net Tangible Assets Greater of A$1M or 10% of average revenue for a retail OTC derivative issuer; 50% cash, 50% liquid. ASIC's core financial-resilience requirement for CFD issuers.
Cash-Flow & Trigger Reporting Quarterly 12-month cash-flow projections; report to ASIC within 3 business days if NTA falls below 110% of the requirement. Continuous solvency monitoring.
Responsible Managers Named Responsible Managers with the knowledge and experience to demonstrate organisational competence. The backbone of an AFSL; without adequate RMs the license is not granted.
Local Presence & People An Australian presence and competent staff and control functions. ASIC licenses real, run-from-Australia businesses.
Compliance & Risk Compliance, risk-management and conflicts frameworks meeting RG 104 / RG 166. Organisational competence and governance.
Client Money Strict client-money handling and segregation under the Corporations Act and ASIC rules. Client-asset protection is closely supervised.
Retail Conduct Controls Leverage caps (30:1 for major FX, lower for others), negative-balance protection, standardised risk warnings. Mandatory product-intervention protections for retail CFDs.
AML/CTF Program An AUSTRAC-aligned AML/CTF program and enrolment. Financial-crime obligations apply from launch.
Documentation Suite Business plan, financial statements, RM CVs, PDS/FSG disclosure documents and systems documentation. ASIC assesses a fully-built, ready-to-run firm.
Ongoing Obligations

ASIC Regulatory Compliance & Financial Resilience Framework

ASIC imposes rigorous financial, governance, and operational standards on entities seeking to offer retail OTC derivatives, including forex and CFD products. Demonstrating financial resilience and organisational competence is a fundamental component of the AFSL application and ongoing compliance process.

At Finjuris, we assist forex and CFD brokers in developing the governance frameworks, financial resource strategies, compliance programs, AML/CTF controls, and regulatory documentation required to meet ASIC's licensing and ongoing supervisory expectations.

Capital & Financial Resources

Applicants must maintain minimum Net Tangible Assets thresholds, sufficient liquid assets for business continuity, and compliant client-money segregation arrangements.

Ongoing Financial Monitoring

Robust oversight including regular cash-flow forecasting, capital adequacy assessments, and internal monitoring to identify financial stress early. ASIC may require prompt notification and remediation if thresholds are approached.

Governance & Risk

Appropriate governance structures, experienced Responsible Managers, effective risk-management frameworks, and comprehensive compliance arrangements capable of supporting the business.

Organisational Competence

Beyond capital, ASIC weighs the depth and credibility of the people and controls behind the application — competence is assessed, not assumed.

The Licensing Pathway

AFSL Application Timeline & Regulatory Assessment

Securing an AFSL for a forex or CFD brokerage requires careful planning, comprehensive documentation, and extensive regulatory engagement. Applications involving retail OTC derivatives are subject to heightened scrutiny by ASIC. Depending on the complexity of the proposed business, applicants should generally anticipate a timeline of approximately 9–15 months.

Phase 1

Business Structuring & License Strategy

Approx. weeks 1–6
  • Establish the Australian legal entity, determine the scope of financial services and product authorisations required.
  • Develop the operating model and appoint appropriately qualified Responsible Managers.
Phase 2

Compliance & Documentation Build Out

Approx. months 2–5
  • Develop the business plan, financial resource and capital adequacy framework, compliance and risk-management programs.
  • Build AML/CTF controls, disclosure documentation and supporting operational policies.
Phase 3

ASIC Assessment & Regulatory Review

Approx. months 5–12+
  • Submit the AFSL application and engage with ASIC throughout the assessment process.
  • Respond to regulatory queries on organisational competence, governance, financial capacity and operational readiness.
Phase 4

License Grant & Market Entry

Ongoing
  • Satisfy any conditions attached to the license; finalise banking and operational infrastructure.
  • Implement regulatory controls and commence authorised activities under the AFSL framework.

Timelines are practical estimates; a ready-made AFSL holder can shorten entry, but a transfer still requires meeting ASIC's RM, capital and conduct expectations — there is no shortcut around substance.

Want an honest ASIC timeline?

Speak to Finjuris
Tax Treatment

Taxation of Forex Companies in Australia

Element Rate Notes
Corporate Income Tax 30% Standard company rate (a reduced 25% rate applies to eligible smaller 'base rate entities').
GST 10% Standard rate; many financial services are input-taxed, with model-specific treatment.
Treaty Network Extensive A broad double-taxation treaty network supporting cross-border structuring.

Australia is a full-tax jurisdiction chosen for credibility and market access, not for rate. A company pays Australian corporate income tax on its profits, with standard compliance, GST and reporting obligations.

As with the UK, the value of Australia is the regulator and the market, not tax minimisation; group-level structuring is where efficiency is found. Finjuris designs that around your commercial goals.

This is general information, not tax advice. Outcomes depend on your facts and the rules in force at the time; obtain tailored advice before relying on any figure.

Our Approach

Why Finjuris for ASIC

Australia rewards firms that arrive with the right classification, the right people and the right capital — and quietly turns away those that don't. Finjuris is built for that bar.

Classification First

We establish whether you're a retail OTC derivative issuer before you build a capital plan — the mistake that derails the most applications.

Responsible Manager Strategy

We help you assemble Responsible Managers whose knowledge and experience ASIC will accept.

A Complete, Defensible File

NTA planning, disclosures, compliance and AML/CTF built to withstand ASIC's scrutiny, not stall in it.

Honest Routing

If ASIC isn't realistic for your stage, we'll say so and point you to a faster credible route — then add Australia later.

Beyond the License

Banking, tax structuring, AML and data-protection compliance and litigation support as you scale across APAC.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

No — it's an Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) under the Corporations Act with authorisations to deal in and make a market in derivatives and FX. Margin FX and CFDs are derivatives, so they fall squarely within AFSL requirements.

Generally no. If you face the client as principal — even while hedging every trade — ASIC treats you as a retail OTC derivative issuer, triggering the full NTA regime. This is the most common and costly misconception about Australia.

A retail OTC derivative issuer must hold net tangible assets of the greater of A$1,000,000 or 10% of average revenue, with 50% in cash/cash equivalents and 50% in liquid assets, plus quarterly cash-flow projections and trigger-point reporting.

A named individual whose knowledge and experience demonstrate the firm's organisational competence to ASIC. You cannot obtain an AFSL without adequate Responsible Managers — securing the right ones is often the gating step.

ASIC's product-intervention rules: leverage caps (30:1 for major currency pairs, lower for other assets), negative-balance protection, standardised risk warnings and strict client-money handling.

ASIC targets around 240 days for straightforward AFSLs, but retail derivative-issuer applications are scrutinised heavily and ASIC has been reluctant to grant new ones. Plan for roughly nine to fifteen months.

Sometimes — it can speed entry, but a transfer still requires meeting ASIC's RM, capital and conduct expectations and regulatory notification. It is not a way around the substance.

No — it's a full-tax jurisdiction (30% company rate). You choose Australia for credibility and market access; efficiency is handled at group level.

Yes, subject to each target market's rules. Many groups run an AFSL alongside an offshore entity to serve different client bases — we structure this where it fits.

ASIC and the FCA are both tier-one and both demanding, with high capital; offshore options are faster and cheaper but carry far less standing. We'll match the jurisdiction to your capital, timeline and ambition — and sequence more than one where it makes sense.
Get Started

Pursue Your ASIC License With Finjuris

Tell us your model, capital and team, and our regulatory team will confirm your classification, design the Responsible Manager and capital plan, and build the AFSL application — or recommend a faster credible route if Australia isn't right yet. One point of contact from first call to launch.

Find out if ASIC is your route.

Request a Free Consultation