Learn — Intermediate

Investor Protection in Europe:
What If Your Broker Fails?

Broker failures are rare — but not impossible. Here’s exactly what protects your ETFs and cash, which compensation schemes apply where, and what is genuinely at risk versus what isn’t.

Dark wood infographic explaining investor protection in Europe if a broker fails, with sections on asset segregation, compensation schemes, claims process, and example protection limits for Europe, the UK and Ireland, and Germany.

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Key takeaways

What protects you
  • Under MiFID II, all regulated EU/UK brokers must hold client assets separately from the broker’s own money.
  • In insolvency, a liquidator returns your assets — they are not part of the broker’s estate.
  • Compensation schemes (FSCS, ICF, EdW, ICS) are a backstop if assets genuinely cannot be returned.
  • EU minimum: €20,000 per client. UK FSCS: £85,000.
What is actually at risk
  • CFD positions — you are the broker’s counterparty, not a holder of real assets.
  • Assets at unregulated or lightly regulated platforms outside MiFID II.
  • Broker-issued structured products (unsecured creditor claims).
  • Market risk: your ETF dropping in value is not a covered claim.

Two distinct layers of protection

Most investors conflate these. They work very differently, and the first one is what actually matters day-to-day.

Layer 1 — Primary
Asset segregation

Your ETF units and uninvested cash are legally separated from the broker’s own balance sheet at all times. In insolvency, a liquidator identifies and returns them to you — they cannot be used to pay the broker’s creditors.

Most investors with regulated brokers will never need Layer 2.

Layer 2 — Backstop
Compensation schemes

Triggered only if assets genuinely cannot be returned — for example, if the broker misappropriated or improperly commingled client funds with firm assets. Limits: €20k (EU minimum), £85k (UK FSCS).

Covers broker failure. Does not cover market losses.

The honest answer for most readers: if you hold UCITS ETFs at a MiFID II-regulated broker that properly maintains segregation, the risk of losing your investment due to broker failure is very low. Your real risk is always market risk — not custodial risk.

What happens step-by-step when a regulated broker fails

MiFID II requires regulated brokers to keep client assets separate from firm assets at all times — for both securities and uninvested cash. Here’s how the process plays out.

  1. The regulator (FCA, CySEC, BaFin, CBI, AFM…) declares the firm in default or appoints an administrator.
  2. A court-appointed liquidator takes inventory of all client assets held in segregated accounts.
  3. Client assets are identified, separated from firm assets, and returned to clients — typically within weeks to months.
  4. If there is a shortfall (assets cannot be fully returned due to misappropriation or fraud), the relevant compensation scheme covers losses up to the applicable limit.
  5. Any claim beyond the compensation limit is treated as an unsecured creditor claim — the weakest form of recovery.
One thing the broker cannot do: use your ETF units or client cash to fund its own operations, post them as collateral for its own borrowings, or include them in its balance sheet. This is a hard legal requirement under MiFID II — breaching it is a serious regulatory offence.

Nominee accounts vs segregated accounts

You will see both terms in broker documentation. The distinction matters, but is often misunderstood — and the label alone tells you very little about safety.

Nominee account Segregated account
Legal title Held in broker’s name on your behalf Held in your name (or ring-fenced sub-account)
Beneficial ownership You (the investor) You (the investor)
In broker insolvency Assets returned — you are beneficial owner Assets clearly outside broker’s estate
Voting rights Broker votes (may pass through on request) Typically yours directly
Common at Trading 212, eToro, Lightyear, most retail apps IBKR, Saxo Bank (direct custody)

For passive ETF investors, the nominee structure is perfectly adequate. The critical MiFID II requirement is that client assets are ring-fenced from firm assets — both models comply when properly implemented. See the nominee vs segregated accounts guide for a full breakdown.


Schemes across Europe: limits and scope

Every EU member state must operate a scheme covering at least €20,000 per client. The UK has its own post-Brexit. Which scheme applies to you depends on the regulated entity holding your account — not your country of residence.

Scheme Jurisdiction Limit Covers Applies to
FSCS United Kingdom £85,000 Securities + cash FCA-regulated firms
ICF Cyprus (CySEC) €20,000 Securities + cash CySEC-licensed firms
EdW Germany (BaFin) €20,000 Securities + cash BaFin-authorised investment firms
ICS Ireland (CBI) €20,000 Securities + cash CBI-authorised investment firms
Bcs Netherlands (AFM) €20,000 Securities + cash AFM-authorised investment firms
Example: You are a Dutch investor using IBKR Ireland. Your compensation scheme is the Irish ICS (€20,000) — not the Dutch scheme — because the entity holding your account is CBI-regulated. Always check your broker’s terms to confirm which regulated entity holds your account.
What compensation schemes do NOT cover
  • Market losses. If your ETF drops 30%, that is investment risk — not a covered claim.
  • CFD positions. Your claim on CFD value in insolvency is as an unsecured creditor, not a protected client asset.
  • Assets above the limit. If segregation was breached and only part of your assets can be recovered, you receive the scheme limit plus your share of the recovered pool — the rest is an unsecured claim.
  • Broker-issued products. Structured notes or instruments issued by the broker itself are liabilities of that issuer — they become unsecured creditor claims in insolvency.

How the major European brokers are structured

A practical summary for the brokers most commonly used by European passive investors.

Interactive Brokers (IBKR)
Strongest structure

Client assets are held in fully segregated accounts across multiple regulated entities. EU clients are served via IBKR Ireland (CBI-regulated, ICS €20k) or IBKR Central Europe. UK clients use IBKR UK (FCA), covered by FSCS up to £85,000. IBKR additionally discloses excess capital ratios publicly — consistently well above regulatory minimums.

One of the most robustly structured custodians available to European retail investors.

Trading 212
FCA + CySEC

UK clients: Trading 212 UK Ltd (FCA-regulated, FSCS £85k). EU clients: Trading 212 Markets Ltd (CySEC-regulated, ICF €20k). Client shares are held in custody with third-party custodians including Interactive Brokers — adding a further layer of separation from Trading 212’s own balance sheet. Uninvested cash is held in segregated bank accounts.

Trade Republic
BaFin regulated

BaFin-regulated, with client securities custodied via Deutsche Bank. This is one of the cleaner custody chains among neo-brokers — your ETF units sit at a major bank sub-custodian, not at Trade Republic itself. EdW scheme covers investment claims up to €20,000.

eToro
Real assets only

EU clients: eToro (Europe) Ltd, CySEC-regulated (ICF €20k). UK clients: eToro UK Ltd (FCA, FSCS £85k). Real-asset positions (stocks and real ETFs in the investment account) are held in custody. CFD positions are not protected client assets — eToro is your counterparty for CFD trades, and claims on CFD value in insolvency are unsecured.

Lightyear
FCA + Estonian FSA

FCA-regulated for UK clients. EU clients served via Lightyear Europe AS, regulated by the Estonian FSA (ICS €20k). Client assets are custodied with DriveWealth as sub-custodian. Segregated structure in line with MiFID II requirements.


Brokers with strong investor protection

All of the below are MiFID II-regulated, hold client assets in segregated custody, and are covered by formal compensation schemes.

IBKR
FCA + CBI + BaFin · FSCS £85k / ICS €20k · Strongest custody structure
Trading 212
FCA + CySEC · FSCS £85k / ICF €20k · IB sub-custody
Trade Republic
BaFin · EdW €20k · Deutsche Bank custody
eToro
FCA + CySEC · FSCS £85k / ICF €20k · Real assets only

Capital at risk. Compensation scheme limits apply per client per firm. Verify current limits directly with your broker and the relevant scheme before investing.



Frequently asked questions

What happens to my ETFs if my broker goes bankrupt?

If your broker holds your assets in a segregated custody account, those assets are legally yours and sit outside the broker’s estate. In insolvency, a liquidator returns them to you — they cannot be used to pay the broker’s creditors. If assets were not properly segregated (a regulatory breach under MiFID II), you become an unsecured creditor and may only recover up to your compensation scheme limit.

What is the EU investor compensation scheme limit?

Under MiFID II, all EU member states must operate an investor compensation scheme covering at least €20,000 per client. This is the minimum — individual countries may set higher limits. The scheme covers claims where a broker cannot return client assets due to insolvency or fraud. It does not cover investment losses from market movements.

What does the UK FSCS cover for investors?

The UK Financial Services Compensation Scheme covers up to £85,000 per person per FCA-regulated firm for investment claims. This applies if the firm fails and cannot return client assets or cash. The £85,000 limit applies separately to investments and to deposits, so your total protection could be higher if your cash is held at a separate FSCS-covered institution. The FSCS does not cover losses from market movements.

Is my money safe at IBKR if it fails?

Interactive Brokers holds client assets in fully segregated accounts across multiple regulated entities. EU clients are covered by local ICS schemes — typically €20,000 via IBKR Ireland’s CBI licence. UK clients are covered by FSCS up to £85,000. IBKR’s excess net capital consistently exceeds regulatory minimums by a large margin, and the firm publicly discloses its capital ratios quarterly. It is one of the most robustly structured custodians available to European retail investors.

What is the difference between a nominee account and a segregated account?

In a nominee account, the broker holds assets in its own name on your behalf — you are the beneficial owner but legal title sits with the broker. In a segregated account, your assets are ring-fenced from the broker’s own balance sheet. Both structures mean your assets should sit outside the broker’s estate in insolvency. The key MiFID II requirement is that client assets are separated from firm assets — both models comply when properly implemented. Most regulated EU/UK retail brokers use a nominee or custody model that meets this standard.

QuantRoutine provides educational content only. Nothing on this page is an offer, solicitation, or recommendation to open an account with any specific broker. Compensation scheme rules, limits, and regulatory entity allocations are subject to change — always verify current details directly with your broker and the relevant scheme before investing. Investments can lose value.

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