Accuro Group Review: Legit Broker or Just Another Scam?

Accuro Group
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Julia Nguyen
Julia Nguyen
I can say without a doubt that the broker Accuro Group is a scam project. To reach this conclusion, it is enough to see that the owners of the project tried to use the name of a real Swiss company, even though they have no connection to it. This fact alone is enough to conclude that trusting your money to this platform would be a huge mistake. These are scammers; they deceive clients by posting false information and will cheat with money as well.
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We know for sure that you’ve been dreaming of trading with a next-generation Forex/CFD broker fully leveraging AI tools. However, before you start unlocking new trading opportunities and executing even a single “lightning-fast execution” trade, we suggest taking a look at our Accuro Group review. Here, we explain why the claims made by the creators of this platform cannot be trusted and prove with facts that we are dealing with a scam project. Don’t want to become the next victim of fraudsters? Then our materials will be useful to you.

Does Accuro Group Show Any Risk Factors?

The broker’s official website does not inspire confidence. However, we cannot claim that the company is a scam until we analyze the official information about the project. We approached the verification of the data provided by this platform with the utmost seriousness.

Judging by how the company presented its information, it has neither an official registration nor a license. Nevertheless, the footer of the Accuro Group website lists an address in Switzerland, and the Client Agreement even provides a registration number from the registry. We started by checking these details (although without much hope for success).

Claimed Swiss registration is false, the real company is unrelated to Accuro Group.

The result of the search in the Swiss business register was somewhat unexpected. Our assumptions were not confirmed: a company named Accuro Group Holding AG has been registered in Switzerland since 2000. Its UEN (Unique Entity Number) matches the one listed by the broker. The holding continues to operate today, and its main activity is financial services.

At first glance, this seemed like a rare case: a brokerage company officially registered in Switzerland. However, one fact raised concerns, neither on the website nor in the document is the full legal name given exactly as it appears in the registry. Moreover, the extract from the articles of association shows detailed information about the company’s activities (highlighted in red on the screenshot). It turns out that the company has declared the possibility of purchasing, managing, and using shares in companies (i.e., stocks, but not only that), as well as providing related consulting and other services.

In fact, we see a holding engaged in direct investments and/or trading equity securities on exchange and/or over-the-counter markets. There is no mention of conducting Forex deals (even retail) or trading CFDs, nor providing brokerage services. We are even certain that this investment company does not require a license from the local regulator, FINMA. Indeed, that turned out to be the case. In the list of banks and securities firms authorized by the regulator, Accuro Group Holding AG is not listed; its activities are not subject to regulation or licensing.

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However, it seems the creators of the broker were unaware of this, found the first investment company in the registry, and illegally used its name.

In fact, they clearly showed us that:

  • The broker has no license.
  • The information about the platform’s registration in Switzerland is nothing but a client deception.
  • The published data from the pseudo-company cannot be trusted.
  • The project is a scam and intends to take traders’ money. There is no other reason for such deception.

Even if the broker had provided its own registration date, after the collapse of the legend about the real Swiss company, we still would not have trusted it. Especially knowing that the real firm was registered 25 years ago, while what we see as the official website gives no impression of a resource with a 25-year history.

Here, the project creators acted quite cleverly, assuming that users would take the company’s registration date as the start of the platform. We will disappoint them and turn to the WHOIS service to find out when the domain was actually registered.

The domain was registered in 2025, revealing Accuro Group’s recent launch.

As you can see, we were right again. The active domain only appeared in May 2025, which means the legend of the broker’s 25-year existence can also be forgotten. Moreover, we know that the first online review of accuro-group.net dates only from August 11, 2025. Accordingly, we can confidently state that the fake company only began fully servicing clients shortly (2–4 months) before this.

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Attention! We would like to warn potential clients of this pseudo-broker. Scammers will now aggressively expand their client base, so treat any offers to open an account with this fake company over the phone with caution.

Moreover, while we were preparing our analysis, another significant problem emerged. Apparently, regulators are doing their job, and websites of malicious financial companies don’t last long. Thus, the brand in question acquired the domain accuro-group.net, and now, as of early December 2025, it operates at accuro-group.co. Surprisingly, the latter was also registered on May 27, 2025, indicating that the founders knew they would face blocking and reserved a bunch of domains in advance.

By the way, there are very few reviews of the scam broker online so far, which further confirms that the project has just started and hasn’t attracted many clients yet. For example, during its entire time online, only 8 comments about its activities appeared on Trustpilot. It is somewhat reassuring that 3 of the authors told the truth about the fake company’s problems, while the owners only managed to pay for 4 positive posts. And we couldn’t find a single accuro-group.co review for the current domain, except for one platform with automatic reliability rankings.

On informational portals and social media, you can find both negative and positive publications about the company. The latter, as we noticed, are written and posted on commission by the owners of Accuro Group, since their authors intentionally avoid fact-checking and repeat false information from the fake broker’s official website. The negative posts, in turn, come from independent users who can clearly see that the pseudo-company displays multiple signs of a scam project.

Let’s Break Down the Leverage

We noticed that the company offers clients trading with leverage from 1:100 to 1:200, with the higher leverage available on accounts with smaller deposits. Leverage of 1:200 allows traders to manage positions 200 times larger than their deposit, which seems tempting for profit potential. However, it comes with serious risks that make trading dangerous, especially for beginners. Experienced traders consider trading under such conditions far from the best choice, for several reasons:

  • Increased losses. With 1:200 leverage, even a small market movement against a position can wipe out the capital. For example, with a $1,000 deposit, a trader can open a $200,000 position (2 standard lots). A 50-pip price movement (0.5% for a pair like EUR/USD, which often occurs in a single trading day) will result in a $1,000 loss (with 2 lots, 1 pip = $20). This wipes out the account, leaving little chance to recover. In comparison, with 1:30 leverage, the same price change would only result in a $150 loss, preserving most of the capital.
  • MarginCall/StopOut activation. At 1:200 leverage, the margin is only 0.5% of the position ($1,000 for $200,000). MarginCall/StopOut levels are very close to the entry price. For example, if the broker states a StopOut of 50%, a 25-pip movement against the position is enough to automatically close the trade. Forex/CFD volatility (especially during news) easily reaches such levels, making trading resemble gambling.
  • Psychological pressure. A position opened with high leverage pushes the trader to make emotional decisions. Beginners often enter such trades, seeing the potential for large profits, while ignoring risk management rules. Watching the deposit burn triggers panic, which clearly undermines rational analysis and calm decision-making. After losses, the temptation to recover losses often leads to even greater losses. Studies show that traders with 1:200 leverage often blow accounts in the first days or weeks.
  • Association with unreliable brokers. Leverage of 1:200 is usually offered by offshore brokers (registered and licensed in Seychelles, Vanuatu, etc.), where supervision is weak and client protection is minimal. These companies can manipulate quotes or delay withdrawals. Unlike Tier 1 regulators (FCA, ASIC), which limit leverage to 1:30, offshore brokers attract beginners with aggressive conditions, increasing risks.
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Thus, effective use of 1:200 leverage requires strict risk management (e.g., 1–2% risk per trade), which demands experience and discipline. Beginners rarely know these rules and even less often follow them in their trading systems. Even professionals prefer low leverage for stability. Accuro Group either ignores these nuances or intentionally offers trading conditions where the client loses their deposit with near 100% probability.

What Does the Accuro-group.co Website Reveal?

The creators of the company’s official website apparently tried to immediately show visitors that doing business with this broker is not worth it. This is evidenced by placing all the materials on a single page and the complete lack of logic in its structure. We understand that scammers don’t usually consider user convenience, but such a questionable decision as a one-page layout for a brokerage firm seems excessive to us.

The site is a single-page design with misleading information and minimal useful content.

The Accuro Group single-page website has quite a few issues with its content:

  • In the Markets section, all available markets are listed with a very brief description (one or two sentences). Clients have no idea what trading instruments they will actually deal with, and there are no contract specifications. In short, the section provides nothing useful for a trader. It’s unclear why it was even included on the site.
  • What else might potential clients want to see on the firm’s website: registration details? Financial statements? Payment details? Forget about all that. The project owners keep all this information secret. Perhaps they are afraid of something? More likely, they simply have nothing to show, since scammers have no company, history, or legal ways to receive/send payments.
  • In the Regulation section, the broker lists organizations from several countries (Swiss Zefix, French DGFIP, Mexican SAT). It looks impressive, especially to beginners unfamiliar with brokerage regulation and licensing. However, a closer look at these organizations quickly dispels that impression. Zefix (Zentraler Firmenindex) is just a register of company names, not an official regulator. The others are tax authorities. None of them issue licenses or regulate brokerage activities.
  • In the Team section, all four photos are taken from other online sources where the same people are presented under different names. Essentially, Accuro Group admits to lacking qualified personnel. In fact, there was never much reason to doubt it.
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It’s hard to understand the purpose of such “half-sites,” as they can neither attract clients nor provide the necessary information. The only likely reason is to establish an online presence and have a place for registration and login buttons.

This is further confirmed by the new client registration process. To register, the user fills out a simple form, taking less than a minute to enter name, surname, and contact details. The account is immediately created, giving the “happy” client access to the personal area.

However, this entire procedure shows complete disregard by the broker for laws and regulator requirements:

  • Users are not presented with a single document outlining the relationship between the company and its clients.
  • No additional personal data (even the address) is collected in the personal area. There is no questionnaire or testing on high-risk assets (like CFDs).
  • Accounts can be funded and trading started without verification; verification is only required for withdrawals. And it’s unclear what exactly is verified, since the broker only knows the client’s full name and country of residence.
  • Only cryptocurrency transfers are available for funding deposits.
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In short, registration and non-trading operations are at the level of a third-rate HYIP. And this is a broker that claims Swiss origins and allegedly operates in nearly all European countries. Ridiculous.

Is the Broker Offering Fair or Risky Terms for Traders?

Accuro Group’s problems are not limited to website structure and content. Disclosure of trading conditions is also weak. As mentioned, contract specifications are missing entirely, and the trading account table provides minimal information.

Clients are offered seven account types, differing in minimum deposit, maximum leverage, and spreads:

  • Beginner: minimum deposit $200, leverage up to 1:200, spreads 0.8 pips.
  • Standard: deposit from $500, leverage up to 1:200, minimum spread 0.8 pips.
  • Premium: entry threshold $1,000, leverage up to 1:100, spreads from 0.6 pips.
  • Gold: minimum $5,000, leverage up to 1:100, spreads from 0.6 pips.
  • Platinum: deposit from $10,000, leverage up to 1:100, zero spreads, trading commission $4.5 per lot one way.
  • Diamond: minimum deposit $25,000, commission reduced to $2.5 per lot.
  • VIP: same conditions as Diamond, except minimum deposit $50,000.

Seven account types are offered, but leverage and hidden risks make trading extremely dangerous.

Traders can open positions from 0.01 standard lots on all accounts. MarginCall/StopOut levels are the same for all and set at 80%/50%.

It’s worth noting that the company does not provide the information needed to calculate trading costs. Swap rates are nowhere to be found, nothing is known about additional fees (such as account maintenance, non-trading operations, etc.), and trading commissions can only be seen in the terminal. Essentially, the firm prevents potential clients from assessing the possibility of profitable trading before creating an account, a tactic used exclusively by scammers who leave traders with no choice.

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Note: The company uses a non-standard approach to encourage traders to switch to accounts with larger deposits. On the two lower-tier accounts, leverage is set at 1:200, making risks unacceptable and deposit loss almost inevitable. On higher-tier accounts, leverage is reduced to 1:100 and spreads are narrower. The list of available trading instruments also differs, all designed to push clients toward larger deposits.

Interestingly, Accuro Group does not advertise additional options in the account list. Apparently, broker specialists make these enticing offers during personal communication, and, of course, forget to mention that none of these promises are actually fulfilled.

Technical Support Analysis of Accuro Group

The company is not stingy with contact information. In the footer, it provides:

  • An address in Switzerland.
  • Support email.
  • A dozen phone numbers with European, Mexican, and Canadian country codes.

As mentioned, the Swiss address is copied from the registration data of the real company the scam is impersonating, so looking for the broker there is useless. The number of phone lines is impressive, but since the broker claims to operate in 36 countries, the legend required at least phone support. Unfortunately, we found that all numbers are virtual, and some don’t even answer.

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This proves again that Accuro Group is a virtual broker existing only online. Yet, for some reason, no social media profiles were created. Most likely, the firm’s resources, both staff quantity and qualifications, are extremely limited, leaving no one to maintain activity in groups and channels. For a platform intended to last only a few months, creating them would also be inefficient.

Strengths and Weaknesses

  • A large number of phone numbers for support.
  • Multiple account types allow traders to choose the most suitable option.
  • The broker operates without official registration and illegally uses the name of a real Swiss company.
  • The platform works without a license and provides brokerage services illegally.
  • Leverage of 1:200 on lower-tier accounts creates unacceptable risks for retail clients.
  • The website contains misleading information, especially about the company itself.
  • Project owners try to boost their image with paid reviews and posts, while on specialized portals, the platform receives very low ratings.

Highlights

Experience in the Market

Less than 1 year

Legal Status

No license

Trading Platform Interface

Web platform/Mobile platforms

Available Leverage Options

Up to 1:200

Initial Investment Requirement

€200

Cost of Trading (Spreads and Fees)

Spreads from 0 pts, trading commissions from $2.5 per lot per side

Support Services Availability

Email support/Phone support

Payment Methods

Crypto

Reputation and Feedback from Traders

Fake positive reviews

FAQ

Why are you sure my funds are not safe?

To secure client funds, a company should hold them in segregated accounts at reputable banks and participate in compensation schemes or insure client deposits. Since Accuro Group is not even officially registered, it cannot open corporate bank accounts or sign insurance agreements with reputable insurers. Client funds go to an anonymous cryptocurrency wallet. How can your deposit be considered safe in this case?

My withdrawal request is ignored, what should I do?

Take two steps. First, demand an explanation from support. If there is none, proceed to the second step: collect all documents proving your interactions with the fake broker, transfers to its wallet, and ignored withdrawal requests, and file a report with law enforcement. Only this way can you initiate an investigation and potentially recover at least part of your funds.

I didn’t see a license number on the official website. Can a regulated broker hide it?

It depends on the regulator. Some offshore authorities do not require public disclosure of licenses. However, legitimate platforms typically post copies or numbers of such documents to build trust. European regulators are stricter, any firm operating under their license must make this information public. If the license is not on the site, the broker is not regulated at all.

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2 reviews about Accuro Group

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  • Seek_TrGM

    Scammers. They called multiple times a day until I was persuaded to open an account. They promised bonuses and help with profitable trading. I quickly started earning, and when my profits exceeded $10,000, they froze the account and demanded more money, allegedly for “insurance.” What insurance, when there’s no such clause in the agreement? After I questioned this, they stopped responding entirely, ignoring all my attempts. So my money is gone forever with these Accuro Group scammers.

  • Chandra

    Platform Name: Accuro (Accuro Group Clone) Status: BLACK-LISTED FRAUD Total Loss: Over $2,270 USD (sent via Ethereum)

    How the Scam Works: I am writing this to warn others about the “Accuro Group (Accuro.Group.Digital).” investment platform. They use highly professional-looking dashboards to trick you into believing you are making massive profits, but it is a complete fabrication designed to steal your money.

    Key Red Flags I Encountered:

    Fake Profits: After I deposited funds via Binance, the platform’s dashboard showed my balance had grown to over $7,800. These profits are fake and do not exist on the blockchain.

    Blocked Withdrawals: When I attempted to withdraw $2,000 and $100, the amounts were deducted from my account balance on their site, but the funds were never sent to my wallet. They simply “disappeared” into the platform’s system.

    The “Assurance Fee” Trap: When I questioned the missing funds, the “managers” demanded an additional $260 “assurance fee” to release my money. Warning: Legitimate platforms will NEVER ask for a fee to “unlock” your own funds.

    Wallet Drainer Tactic: They instructed me to set up a Trust Wallet using a 12-word seed phrase they provided. If you use a phrase provided by a scammer, you are giving them total control of that wallet. They are waiting for you to deposit the “fee” so they can instantly steal it.

    Verified Transaction Evidence (Proof of Fraud): The funds were sent from my Binance account to the following scammer-controlled Ethereum address:

    Scammer Address: 0x6a192661579737E1C790CbeF12C12D3A11C9C840

    Transaction Hash 1: 0x19273c090387b320d75c87f872898c60315a6e8df815598696ec0609368d9047

    Transaction Hash 2: 0x6e9f061f55b9e830f9a2e379c6d3753558c4224c6199859f1430030638596000

    Final Advice: Do not send any money to this platform. If you have already been contacted by them, stop all communication immediately. Do not trust “Recovery Scammers” who claim they can get your money back for a fee—they are part of the same criminal network.

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