I’ve been looking at Exness more seriously lately, and I’m trying to get a clear picture of what I’m actually paying per trade. On the surface their spreads look competitive, but I want to know the real numbers once I add everything together.
Like, what’s their average spread on major pairs during normal market conditions versus when news hits? I know spreads widen during volatility, but I’m curious how badly they move on Exness specifically.
Also, how much does the GlobeGain cashback actually help with their cost structure? I’ve seen people mention rebates covering a portion of your spread, but I haven’t found concrete examples yet.
Has anyone actually calculated their true cost per lot on Exness after factoring in both spreads and rebates? Would help me decide if they’re genuinely cheaper than the other brokers I’m considering.
Exness spreads tighten with volume but rebates help a lot.
Average cost is roughly 1.2 pips minus your cashback rebate.
Calculate your actual cost by tracking a month of trades. Spread varies based on account type and market conditions, so no single number works.
Euro trades usually run 0.8 to 1.4 pips on their Standard account during regular hours. News events push spreads wider, sometimes 2 to 3 pips.
Rebates from GlobeGain typically cover 0.2 to 0.5 pips depending on your trading volume. So your real cost on a standard EUR/USD trade is closer to 0.6 to 1.2 pips after rebate.
Compare that to your other brokers using the same method. The broker with the lowest real cost wins, not the one with the flashiest marketing numbers.
I’ve been tracking my costs on Exness for a couple months now. The spreads are decent on major pairs, especially during London and New York sessions.
What really helped was linking my account to GlobeGain. I noticed the rebate added up faster than I expected, and it definitely cut into my per-trade expenses.
The key is testing it yourself with real money on a small position first. That way you see exactly what the spreads look like in your trading times.
Exness spreads are fine but not exceptional. The rebates make a difference though.
Most traders I know say the total cost is reasonable after cashback kicks in.
I tested Exness for about three months last year. On my typical EUR/USD scalping, spreads averaged around 1 to 1.2 pips during market hours.
The thing that surprised me was how consistent the spreads stayed even when volatility picked up. Some brokers blow out their spreads on news, but Exness held pretty steady in my experience.
Once I got the GlobeGain rebate working, my effective cost dropped to roughly 0.6 to 0.8 pips per trade. For my volume, that added up to meaningful savings by the end of the month.
Got better execution elsewhere, but on pure cost numbers Exness stacks up well against most mid-tier brokers.
The spreads alone aren’t the full picture. I also noticed their execution speed was solid, which saved me from slippage that other brokers charged me.
Spread plus slippage plus commission, if any, equals your real cost. Exness was competitive on all three fronts for the pairs I trade most.