How to use: ask the broker each Pertanyaan in writing (email or live chat — get it in text you can save). If they refuse to answer in writing, that is the answer. A genuinely halal-structured broker will be transparent about all twelve.

Skor this account

0 / 12
Tick boxes as you confirm each item

The 12 questions, explained

1. Is there ANY overnight charge — by any name?

Ask: "Will my account be charged any fee for positions held overnight, regardless of what the fee is called — swap, rollover, admin fee, financing fee, holding fee, currency conversion fee?" A genuinely swap-free account answers "no charge of any kind for holding positions, regardless of duration."

2. Is there a maximum hold period before fees kick in?

Some Broker offer swap-free for 5-14 days only. After that, swaps apply. This is structurally a deferred swap — useful for day traders but problematic for swing traders. Ask for the explicit hold period.

3. Are the spreads identical to standard accounts?

If the Islamic account has noticeably wider spreads, the broker has built the swap revenue into the spread. Structurally still a financing component, just hidden. Cek by comparing the live spreads side by side.

4. Is the Komisi per lot the same as on a standard ECN account?

A broker that offers a swap-free ECN account at $7/lot instead of $7/lot has done it cleanly. A broker charging $14/lot has loaded the cost. Compare to the standard ECN account Komisi.

5. Is swap-free available on all instruments — or only Forex majors?

Some Broker only remove swaps on EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY etc., but keep them on metals, Indeks, and Kripto CFDs. If you trade Emas or Indeks, this matters. Get the full list of swap-free instruments.

6. Is there a "negative balance protection" guarantee?

If a sharp market gap leaves your account below zero, who covers the negative balance? On most regulated Broker it is automatically zeroed out. On some unregulated Broker, you owe the broker the negative balance — which crosses into a debt with riba implications. Get this in writing.

7. What is the broker's regulation?

Top-tier regulation (FCA in UK, ASIC in Australia, CySEC in EU, DFSA in Dubai) means real client money segregation, real complaints procedures, real audit. Offshore-only regulation (St. Vincent, Vanuatu, Marshall Islands) means you have very limited recourse if anything goes wrong — and recourse-less trades have additional gharar concerns.

8. Are client funds segregated from the broker's own funds?

If the broker uses your money for their own operations, the situation looks structurally like a loan you didn't agree to — and the broker pays themselves an implicit interest on it. Segregated accounts mean your money sits in a separate banking facility that the broker cannot touch for their own use.

9. Does the broker certify Shariah compliance externally?

Some Broker have their Islamic accounts certified by recognized Shariah supervisory boards (AAOIFI-aligned scholars, Bahrain Shariah Tinjau Bureau, etc.). External certification is not a guarantee — but it is a stronger signal than the broker's marketing claim alone.

10. Is there a maximum leverage cap?

Many scholars advise lower leverage (1:30 or 1:50) for Islamic accounts to reduce gharar. A broker that offers 1:1000 on its "Islamic" account has either misunderstood or doesn't care. Look for Broker that cap Islamic-account leverage at lower-than-standard levels.

11. What is the broker's stance on hedging and EAs?

Some Broker ban Expert Advisors (EAs) and hedging on Islamic accounts. This is fine. Others permit them but treat them differently from standard accounts — sometimes adding extra fees. Understand the operational rules before funding.

12. What documentation will I receive on account opening?

Ask for the Islamic account terms in writing before you sign. Read them. If the terms include any reference to interest, financing charges, or rollover compensation, the account is not what is being marketed. A clean Islamic account agreement is Short and explicit on the absence of these elements.

If you scored below 8

The account is not clearly halal-structured. It may still be acceptable to your scholar, or it may not. Take the answers you received and discuss them with someone qualified before funding. Marketing language is not a substitute for structural transparency.