| | |
| Company type | Subsidiary |
|---|---|
| Industry | FinTech |
| Founded | 2016 |
| Founders |
|
| Headquarters | London, United Kingdom |
Key people |
|
| Products | Share dealing |
| Revenue | |
| AUM | |
| Total assets | |
| Total equity | |
| Owner | IG Group |
Number of employees | |
| Website | freetrade |
Freetrade is a UK-based fintech company founded in 2016 by Adam Dodds and Davide Fioranelli. It provides a mobile trading platform targeting retail investors in the UK, allowing users to trade equities and ETFs through iOS and Android applications.
Initially relying on crowdfunding, Freetrade grew during the COVID-19 pandemic and raised venture capital funding including a $69 million Series B round in 2021. Despite growth, it faced persistent financial losses and declining valuations from 2022 onwards. By the end of 2024, Freetrade onboarded 720k active customers with assets under management of £2.5 billion. [2]
Freetrade experienced regulatory scrutiny related to its advertising practices and criticism regarding hidden fees in its pricing model. In January 2025, Freetrade was acquired by IG Group for £160 million, prompting criticism from retail investors due to the significantly reduced valuation. [3] [4] [5]
Freetrade was founded in 2016 by Adam Dodds and Davide Fioranelli. [6] [7] In October 2017, the company obtained a license from the Financial Conduct Authority. [8] It launched an iOS app in October 2018, followed by an Android version in April 2019. [9] [10] A Forbes review described Freetrade's app as "a challenger stock trading app built for the Instagram age," praising its accessibility while criticizing its lack of financial charting tools and the initial absence of US-listed securities. [11]
In 2019, venture capital firm Molten Ventures participated in Freetrade's $15 million Series A funding round. [12] [13] [14]
In 2018, CTO and co-founder André Mohamed departed, while Viktor Nebehaj, an early crowdfunding investor, joined as chief marketing officer. [15] Ian Fuller joined as VP of Engineering from Snapchat in 2018 and left in 2021. [16] In July 2023, Freetrade EU head Jordan Sinclair was hired as UK head by Robinhood Markets, Freetrade's principal rival. [17] [18] [19]
Freetrade experienced significant growth during the COVID-19 pandemic, [18] [20] further benefiting from the GameStop short squeeze in early 2021. [21] [22]
Freetrade has relied heavily on crowdfunding: between 2017 and 2019, it raised over £10 million from individual investors. [8] A sixth crowdfunding campaign in May 2020 raised an additional £7 million. [23] [20]
The company's $69 million Series B funding round was announced in March 2021, led by Left Lane Capital, with participation from L Catterton and Molten Ventures. [24] [25] Despite reaching quarterly trading volumes exceeding £1 billion in May 2021, [24] 1 million registered users by October, [26] and £1 billion in assets under administration by November, [27] the company reported a net loss of £17.1 million for the year. [28]
In 2022, Freetrade struggled to find new backers at its hoped-for £700 million valuation amid a broader downturn in tech funding. [29] [30] The company instead raised £30 million from existing investors through a Crowdcube convertible loan note in May 2022 [30] [31] and, in September 2022, cut approximately 15% of its staff to extend its cash runway. [30] [32] After these measures, the company's valuation fell 65% to £225 million. [5] [21] The year ended with a net loss of £28.8 million, marking one of the company's worst financial performances. [33]
Initially, Freetrade had plans to expand across Europe, beginning with Sweden, Ireland, and the Netherlands. [34] [35] A pan-European launch was scheduled for early 2023, [28] but by 2024, the company withdrew from the Swedish market, and the planned launches in Ireland and the Netherlands never materialized. [36]
In May 2024, CEO and co-founder Adam Dodds announced his resignation, with COO Viktor Nebehaj succeeding him. [37] At the same time, Freetrade reported its first-ever profit, posting a gross profit of £12.3 million and an adjusted operating profit of £91,000. [3] In October 2024, the company acquired the UK client base and assets of Australia-based online broker Stake for an undisclosed sum. [38] At the end of 2024, Freetrade reported a 32% year-over-year revenue increase, reaching £27.5 million. [2] By the end of 2024, the company had onboarded 720,000 customers with assets under administration of £2.5 billion. [2]
In August 2024, Freetrade announced a partnership with Sharegain to launch securities lending to its UK retail clients. [39]
In January 2025, Freetrade was acquired by IG Group for £160 million in a cash deal, representing a 29% discount from its previous fundraising valuation (£225 million). This sale price contrasted with the company's peak valuation of around £650 million in late 2021. [3] The acquisition was completed on 1 April 2025 following regulatory approval. [40] The company said that it would continue to operate as a commercially standalone entity under its own brand. [41] Six months prior to the acquisition, in mid-2024, Freetrade's CEO Viktor Nebehaj stated to Sky News: "Right now, Freetrade is in its strongest financial position in its history," highlighting optimism about the company's future prospects. However, Sky News later revealed that as early as 2022, Freetrade had engaged in preliminary discussions with investment bank JP Morgan about a potential sale, though these discussions ultimately did not result in an agreement. [42] Early investors criticized the deal, accusing the management of ignoring smaller investors who had significantly supported the company's growth through crowdfunding. Viktor Nebehaj acknowledged that Series B investors incurred losses from the sale [4] [42] while, as one user noted, he "coincidentally became a millionaire in the process." [43]
In late 2025, Freetrade expanded its product range and revised its pricing. In October 2025, it added over 300 mutual funds and introduced retail access to UK government bonds such as gilts and Treasury bills. [44] In September 2025, the company said its free plan would include a Stocks and Shares ISA at no charge (previously a paid feature). [45] In January 2026, Freetrade removed subscription fees for SIPP accounts and made mutual funds and gilts available on the free tier, shifting paid plans toward optional benefits such as lower foreign exchange fees and higher interest on cash balances. [46]
Freetrade offers a trading app available on Android and iOS, open to users in the United Kingdom. The platform allows users to trade equities and ETFs listed in the UK and the United States, with support for fractional share trading in U.S. securities. Portfolios can be held in tax-free ISA or SIPP accounts; these account types were initially available only with a paid subscription, but in 2025–26 Freetrade removed the monthly fees, making both ISAs and SIPPs available on the free tier. [45] [46] In October 2020, Freetrade introduced its premium service, Freetrade Plus, which expanded the list of available securities and order types. [47] The platform's backend operates on a serverless computing model hosted by Google Cloud Platform. [10]
By 2025, Freetrade's platform included equities, ETFs and investment trusts, as well as hundreds of mutual funds and UK government bonds such as gilts and Treasury bills. [44] The company primarily earns revenue from foreign exchange fees on non-GBP trades, interest on cash balances, and optional subscription features, rather than per-trade commissions. Its "zero-fee" positioning has drawn criticism that foreign exchange charges can significantly affect users' overall costs. [25] In 2025–2026, Freetrade removed subscription fees for ISA and SIPP accounts and made mutual funds and gilts available on its free tier. [46]
In January 2020, Freetrade faced allegations of fostering a toxic workplace culture following an investigation by City A.M. into employee complaints. Reports indicated that between 2018 and 2019, the company had a 50% staff turnover rate, with the entire design team resigning at one point. [48] [49] Former employees described being pressured into excessive workloads and cited dysfunctional management, abusive communication, and a lack of recognition for good performance. [50]
Freetrade was warned by the UK Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) regarding misleading financial promotions. In March 2020, the regulator identified non-compliant promotional materials and demanded a review of the company's advertising practices. The FCA found that Freetrade's advertisements failed to provide "a fair and prominent indication of any relevant risks when referencing potential benefits." Despite acknowledging the issue and implementing corrective measures, the company received a supervisory notice in March 2021, requiring the removal of all paid sponsored influencer advertisements on social media platforms. The FCA emphasized that the ads were misleading, as they implied guaranteed positive returns on investments, posing a risk to financially vulnerable individuals. The company failed to resolve the issue and received a second supervisory notice in January 2022. [51] [52] In February 2022, the FCA took further action, ordering Freetrade to remove all sponsored influencer posts within 24 hours following another misleading promotion involving a social media influencer who claimed to have cleared £14,000 of debt in 18 weeks without clearly disclosing investment risks. The FCA expressed concern about the vulnerability of the influencer's 64,000 followers, highlighting that consumers already in debt could be misled into believing they could reduce their debts through similar investment actions. This was the third warning from the FCA regarding the company's advertising practices. [53]
In 2023, Freetrade faced criticism after it emerged that some of its customers could face unexpected tax liabilities due to the platform allowing the purchase of fractional shares in popular US companies within Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs). According to UK tax regulations, fractional shares are not eligible to be held within ISAs, potentially leaving investors exposed to tax on gains that they assumed were sheltered within tax-free accounts. [54]