Abstract:Freedom24 is widening its European setup with local offices, in-house technology and a possible banking licence, while brokerage remains its main business.

Freedom24 is adjusting its European business as it looks beyond a standard online brokerage model.
The company serves more than 600,000 clients across EU and EEA markets. Its main business remains brokerage, with clients using its in-house platform Tradernet to access global markets.
Freedom24 is still primarily a broker in Europe. It operates under a CySEC-regulated structure and provides market access to retail investors.
The company has also kept its main trading technology in-house. This gives it more control over platform updates, client data flows and system integration, but it does not change the fact that brokerage is still the base of the business.
Freedom24 also maintains offices in several European countries.
For an online broker, local offices are mainly useful for support, communication and market operations. They also help the company deal with different languages, client habits and service expectations across Europe.
Freedom24 has said it is exploring a banking licence in Europe, but no licence has been announced.
A banking licence could support wider services such as accounts and payments. For now, this remains a possible next step, not a completed change.
Building a wider financial platform in Europe is not simple. Brokerage, banking, payments and other financial services are regulated under different rules.
That means any expansion beyond brokerage would likely depend on further approvals, stronger compliance systems and whether clients actually use those additional services.
For now, Freedom24s European business should still be viewed mainly as a regulated brokerage with local offices and its own technology platform.
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