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Lesson 3Start safelyBeginner55 min

Broker checks, FSCA status, accounts, and demo setup

Learn how to check a broker, choose demo-first account settings, and avoid deposit-pressure traps.

Lesson outcomes

  • Check a provider on the FSCA public register.
  • Understand demo, live, standard, raw-spread, and cent accounts.
  • Know which account details to compare before depositing.

Workshop lab

Complete the demo, notebook, platform, or code task before treating the lesson as finished.

Evidence pack

Keep screenshots, exports, logs, calculations, or code versions in a dated learning folder.

Pass standard

You should be able to explain the failure modes, show your work, and name the stop rule.

Free education, not signals. This lesson is part of EarnSouthAfrica's free forex course. It does not tell you what to buy or sell, it does not promise income, and it should be practised on a demo account before any real-money decision.

Before MetaTrader, before indicators, and long before bots, you need to know who holds your money. A good-looking trading platform does not prove that a broker is authorised, fair, affordable, or suitable for you.

Your first account should be a demo account. Demo is not perfect because emotions change when money is real, but it lets you learn the platform and calculations without paying tuition to the market.

What you should be able to do after this lesson

  • Check a provider on the FSCA public register.
  • Understand demo, live, standard, raw-spread, and cent accounts.
  • Know which account details to compare before depositing.

Broker due diligence checklist

  • Search the provider name and FSP number on the FSCA public register.
  • Check whether the legal entity on the register matches the website and account agreement.
  • Compare deposit and withdrawal methods, including ZAR EFT availability and withdrawal timing.
  • Read spreads, commissions, swaps, inactivity fees, conversion fees, and minimum deposit rules.
  • Check whether negative balance protection is offered and where client funds are held.
  • Search for recent regulator warnings or complaints before depositing.

Demo settings that make practice useful

A demo account with fake millions teaches bad habits. Set demo balance close to the amount you could realistically afford to risk after your emergency needs are covered. If your future live account might be R2,000, practise on a R2,000 or R5,000 demo, not R500,000.

  • Use the same platform type you plan to learn: MT5 if the broker supports it, MT4 only if needed.
  • Use realistic leverage and account currency settings.
  • Treat demo losses as process errors to investigate, not fake money to ignore.
  • Keep a journal from the first demo trade.

Deposit-pressure warning

Be careful when a broker representative, influencer, or signal group pushes you to deposit before you understand the account. A proper learning path gives you time to compare costs, read documents, and practise. Pressure is not education.

Academy-grade study plan

Treat this lesson as the compliance and scepticism foundation of the course. A paid mentor can teach platform tricks, but a serious operator first proves that the provider, claim, and account setup can survive basic scrutiny.

Course elementWhat you must produce
Primary artifactVerification dossier
Lesson focusBroker checks, FSCA status, accounts, and demo setup
Working environmentDemo account, notebook, exported platform data, or local code sandbox. Never live funds for first practice.
Completion standardYou can explain the concept, reproduce the exercise, identify failure modes, and show evidence without relying on a seller's claims.

Instructor workflow

Use this workflow as if an instructor were marking the lesson. The important question is not whether the topic sounds familiar. The question is whether your notes, screenshots, calculations, logs, or code prove that you can apply broker checks, fsca status, accounts, and demo setup under controlled conditions.

  • Capture the claim exactly as it was presented, including screenshots, dates, URLs, account names, and promises.
  • Separate identity checks, licensing checks, platform checks, and performance checks so one strong-looking area does not excuse another weak area.
  • Make the decision before emotion enters: reject, research further, demo only, or proceed with strict limits.
  • Record the evidence that would make you change your mind, because vague suspicion and blind trust are both weak processes.

Worked case study: Telegram mentor pressure test

A creator claims that their mentorship will help a beginner turn a small deposit into monthly income and says the discount expires tonight. The professional response is not to argue in the chat. It is to build a verification dossier, check provider details, refuse urgency, and decide whether the claim deserves any attention after the evidence is reviewed.

After reading the scenario, write the decision you would make before checking the suggested workflow above. Then compare your decision with the operating model. The gap between those two answers is the part of the lesson that deserves another demo repetition.

Professional template

Complete this template in your own notebook. A paid course would normally hide this kind of operating document behind worksheets; here it is part of the free lesson.

FieldStandard
ClaimWrite the exact promise, price, deadline, and required deposit.
Provider identityRecord names, company details, regulatory status, contact information, and contradictions.
Proof offeredClassify proof as screenshot, statement, audited record, demo record, or unverifiable marketing.
DecisionReject, keep researching, demo only, or proceed with a capped educational experiment.

Failure-mode lab

Paid courses often sell confidence. A serious course teaches you how the idea breaks. Before continuing, test the failure modes below on demo, paper, or code review. If you cannot describe the failure, you are not ready to trust the concept.

  • Accepting screenshots as proof without deposits, withdrawals, open drawdown, and account statement context.
  • Assuming a platform login or branded website means the person selling the course is regulated or trustworthy.
  • Letting urgency replace research because the offer has a countdown, bonus, or private group invitation.
  • Opening a live account before you can explain spreads, leverage, stop-loss distance, and withdrawal rules.

Evidence pack and pass standard

Do not mark this lesson complete because you read it. Mark it complete only when you can show the evidence below. Keep the files in a dated folder so your learning history survives platform updates, memory gaps, and sales pressure.

  • A one-page note explaining broker checks, fsca status, accounts, and demo setup without sales language or copied definitions.
  • A screenshot, export, calculation, log, or code file that proves the practical work was completed on demo.
  • A written stop rule that says when this topic must not be used with real money.
  • A saved provider-check file with links, dates, screenshots, and a final decision note.
  • A list of three claims you refused because the seller could not provide verifiable evidence.

Assessment rubric

LevelWhat it looks like
Not readyYou can repeat the vocabulary but cannot complete the demo task, calculate the risk, explain the failure mode, or show evidence.
Course passYou can complete the practical task on demo, explain the decision rules, show evidence, and name the conditions where the idea must not be used.
Strong passYou can teach the concept to someone else, find edge cases, document a rejected example, and improve the template without weakening risk controls.

Advanced homework

  • Audit three forex adverts and score them from 0 to 5 for identity, evidence, risk disclosure, pressure, and withdrawal transparency.
  • Rewrite one scammy advert into an honest education disclaimer without any income promise.
  • Create your personal no-payment rule for courses, bots, signals, and account managers.

Practical drill

Do this lesson as a controlled exercise, not as a reason to trade live. Open a demo account or notebook, write the lesson title, and record what you changed, clicked, calculated, or checked. If the lesson includes code, compile it only in a demo environment and keep the original version unchanged so you can compare edits safely.

  • Write a one-paragraph explanation of broker checks, fsca status, accounts, and demo setup in your own words.
  • Take one screenshot or note that proves you completed the platform, maths, research, or code task.
  • Record one risk rule that would stop you from using this idea with real money.
  • If anything feels unclear, repeat the lesson before moving to the next module.

How scammers misuse this topic

Scammers often take real concepts and wrap them in urgency. They may use platform jargon, bot screenshots, copied profit charts, or official-sounding language to make a paid offer feel safe. A real concept is not the same as a safe offer. Before paying anyone, ask whether you can verify the provider, reproduce the calculation, test the claim on demo, understand the risk, and walk away without pressure.

Checkpoint before continuing

  • You can search an FSP on the FSCA public register.
  • You can explain why a demo account should use realistic balance settings.
  • You know which fees and account terms to compare before depositing.

Official references

These lessons are written as free education. When platform features or rules matter, verify against the official source before using real money.

Risk note: leveraged forex and contracts for difference can lose money quickly. EarnSouthAfrica is an educational publisher, not a broker, adviser, signal provider, or money manager.

Keep exploring

Read the latest guides, take the side-hustle quiz, or contact the editorial desk if you spot a correction.