Trading 212 closed 2025 with explosive growth, posting £277.6 million in revenue and more than doubling its pre-tax profit.
Trading 212 closed 2025 with explosive growth, posting £277.6 million in revenue and more than doubling its pre-tax profit.
Trading 212 posted a 72% revenue surge to £277.6 million in 2025, driven by record user growth and platform expansion.
KEY POINTS
Trading 212 is tightening its grip on the United Kingdom’s retail trading market. The broker closed 2025 with a 72 per cent revenue jump to £277.6 million, cementing its position as one of the sector’s fastest-growing platforms. Pre-tax profit more than doubled, rising from £52.9 million to £123.1 million, while the company netted £92.2 million for the year.
Trading 212 operates across two distinct business lines, contracts for differences (CFDs) and stock trading. The CFD arm generates income through market making, spreads, and overnight financing. Its zero-commission stock trading model, meanwhile, earns revenue from forex conversion and, in part, from interest on invested client cash.
Of the total £277.6 million, trading activity contributed almost £257 million. Client interest income added a further £20.6 million, while its debit card product generated £1.68 million. The company, however, did not break down the split between legacy CFD revenue and income from its stock trading operations.
This latest surge follows a 55 per cent revenue increase the year prior, underscoring a sustained multi-year growth trajectory. The company attributed the momentum to the rising appeal of technology-driven platforms that allow a new generation of investors to manage their financial portfolios at low cost and with tools they already understand.
Beyond revenue, Trading 212‘s operational metrics told an equally striking story. Funded accounts on the platform jumped 69 per cent over the course of 2025. Average monthly active users climbed 84 per cent, and the combined value of client money and assets surged 140 per cent.
Costs, however, climbed alongside the growth. Administrative expenses rose 44 per cent to £163 million, and advertising and marketing spend increased from £39.5 million to approximately £51.5 million. Staff costs nearly doubled to £15.8 million, reflecting a significant expansion of the workforce, the headcount grew from 53 employees at the end of 2024 to 122 by the close of 2025.
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