Higher Rated
LiteFinance
Capital at risk · T&Cs apply
Choosing between LiteFinance and Stash depends on your trading style, preferred markets, and budget. LiteFinance is headquartered in Kingstown, St Vincent, while Stash operates from New York, USA. LiteFinance has the longer track record, established in 2005, compared to Stash which was founded in 2015. This in-depth comparison covers regulation, fees, platforms, markets, and overall ratings to help you decide which broker is the better fit in 2026.
LiteFinance
Stash
LiteFinance is the better choice overall, scoring 3.4/5 vs 3.3/5 on BrokerRank's independent rating. On fees, LiteFinance offers lower spreads (0 pips).
See full side-by-side comparison belowOverall Rating
LiteFinance
3.4 vs 3.3
Lowest Fees
Tied
0 vs 0 pips
Regulation
Tied
2 vs 2 licences
Min. Deposit
Stash
$50 vs $0
LiteFinance
Stash
WinnerLiteFinance
Stash
Lower feesLiteFinance holds licences from CySEC, FSA. Stash is regulated by SEC, FINRA.
Both brokers offer access to Stocks markets. LiteFinance additionally covers Forex, Cfd, Indices, Commodities. Stash adds Etf, Crypto.
LiteFinance supports MT4, MT5, Proprietary Web. Stash offers Proprietary Mobile, Proprietary Web. Both brokers are available on Proprietary Web.
LiteFinance requires a minimum deposit of $50, while Stash sets no minimum deposit. This makes Stash accessible to traders with any budget.
BrokerRank scores LiteFinance at 3.40/5 and Stash at 3.32/5, based on 50+ data points covering regulation, fees, platforms, markets, and user experience. LiteFinance leads overall with a clear advantage.
LiteFinance scores higher overall on our independent rating system. LiteFinance holds a 3.4/5 rating vs Stash's 3.3/5. The best choice ultimately depends on your trading style — see our full verdict above for a detailed breakdown.
LiteFinance offers spreads from 0 pips, while Stash starts at 0 pips. Check the fees section above for a full breakdown.
LiteFinance requires a minimum deposit of $50. Stash requires $0.
LiteFinance is regulated by CySEC, FSA, while Stash holds licences from SEC, FINRA.
LiteFinance supports MT4, MT5, Proprietary Web. Stash supports Proprietary Mobile, Proprietary Web.
Yes, you can hold accounts at multiple brokers simultaneously. Many traders diversify across platforms to access different markets and tools.
Only 26% of Brokers Are Truly Fee-Free
BrokerRank Research — Hidden costs across 345 brokers
58% of Brokers Hold a Single Licence
BrokerRank Research — Regulation quality analysis
71% of Retail Traders Lose Money
BrokerRank Research — Loss rates across 50 EU brokers
76% of Brokers Use Proprietary Platforms
BrokerRank Research — MT4 vs MT5 vs proprietary
Trading involves risk. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Capital at risk. Full risk disclosure.