Abstract:Mtxotu represents a critical risk to traders, holding a dangerously low WikiFX score of 1.15 and operating without any valid regulatory license. Verified user complaints from 2025 confirm severe issues, including blocked withdrawals and fraudulent demands for additional fees.

Executive Summary: Mtxotu is an unregulated broker established in 2025 with a concerningly low WikiFX score of 1.15. Despite claims of a U.S. presence, it lacks necessary NFA authorization, and user reports confirm patterns of blocked withdrawals and unethical fee demands.
Finding a safe trading partner can be stressful. Before you find a broker heavily promoted on social media or messaging apps, it is vital to pause and look at the hard data. In this Mtxotu review, we are analyzing a platform that has only been around since 2025.
The most glaring data point right now is the WikiFX Score. Mtxotu currently holds a score of 1.15 out of 10. This is near the bottom of the scale, which usually indicates one of three things: the broker is brand new, it is unregulated, or it has a history of defrauding clients. In this case, our analysis suggests a combination of these risk factors. When you see a score this low, it is the financial equivalent of a “Do Not Enter” sign.
The short answer is: No, your money does not appear to be safe here.
According to the regulatory database, Mtxotu does not hold any valid regulatory license. While the broker claims to be located in the United States, there is a massive discrepancy here. In the U.S., any legitimate Forex broker must be registered with the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) and be a member of the NFA (National Futures Association). Mtxotu does not have these credentials.
When you trade with a regulated broker (like one monitored by the NFA in the US or the FCA in the UK), your funds are often kept in “Segregated Accounts.” This means the broker cannot touch your deposit to pay for their office rent, marketing, or debts.
However, with an unregulated broker like Mtxotu, you face Counterparty Risk. This means the broker is the only entity guaranteeing your money. If they decide to close their website, declare bankruptcy, or simply refuse a withdrawal, there is no government agency to step in and help you recover your funds. You are essentially handing cash to a stranger with no contract.
Mtxotu offers three checking account types: PREMIUM, PRO, and CENT. They advertise a maximum leverage of 1:100 and spreads starting “From 0.001”.
While 1:100 leverage allows you to control a large position with a small deposit, it is a double-edged sword. For a beginner, 1:100 leverage can wipe out an entire account balance in minutes if the market moves slightly against you. Regulated regulators often cap leverage at 1:30 or 1:50 to protect retail traders. High leverage paired with a lack of regulation is a common setup used by high-risk brokers to encourage traders to lose their deposits quickly.
The claim of spreads from “0.001” is also worth noting. In the Forex market, costs usually come from spreads (the difference between buy and sell prices). A near-zero spread often implies there are high commissions hidden elsewhere, or it is a “bait” number used to attract inexperienced investors. Without a regulator to audit these prices, there is no guarantee that the trade execution is fair.
This is the most critical section of our review. The database contains specific, alarming complaints from actual users.
Case 1: The “Fee” Scam (Korea, August 2025)
A trader reported a classic investment scam scenario. They were induced to invest large sums with the promise of high returns. The platform allegedly “manipulated” the charts to show profit. However, when the trader tried to withdraw, Mtxotu demanded “security deposits” and “bank fees” to be paid in addition to what was already in the account. The scammer even admitted fraud, telling the victim they could earn money by recruiting new victims to the site.

Case 2: Withdrawal Blocks (Korea, August 2025)
Another user reported losing over 200 million won (approx. $150,000 USD). The user described a situation where customer service stopped responding after withdrawal requests were made. The broker allegedly requested deposits be made into personal bank accounts rather than a corporate business account—a massive red flag.
If a broker ever asks you to wire more money to pay a “tax” or “security fee” before they release your profits, stop immediately. Legitimate brokers simply deduct fees from your account balance. Asking for fresh funds is a hallmark of a scam designed to steal the last bit of your capital.
The available data does not confirm that Mtxotu uses the industry-standard MT4 or MT5 platforms. The website URL suggests a proprietary web-based system.
Using a proprietary or unknown platform introduces significant risk. Established platforms like MetaTrader are third-party software; the broker cannot easily change the historical price feed on the software itself. With a proprietary web app, the broker often has full control over the numbers you see on your screen.
Furthermore, security is a concern. Always ensure you are on the correct official site before entering your login credentials. Scammers often create “clone” sites to steal passwords. However, given the nature of the complaints regarding Mtxotu (profit manipulation), the risk here isn't just hackers—it's likely the platform itself working against you.
Absolutely not.
The evidence against Mtxotu is overwhelming. They have a WikiFX score of 1.15, no regulatory license, and documented cases of traders being blocked from their own funds. The complaints describe aggressive scam tactics, including profit manipulation and demands for “unfreezing fees.”
Your Action Plan:
Risk Warning: Broker status changes daily. Before depositing, check the WikiFX App for the latest real-time certificate and score updates.