The dominance of Trading 212 in the United Kingdom’s retail trading market is growing fast, as the broker ended 2025 with a 72 per cent revenue increase to £277.6 million. Its pre-tax profit also increased to £123.1 million from the previous year’s £52.9 million, while netting £92.2 million.
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Who Is the Big Revenue Generator?
Trading 212 offers both contracts for differences (CFDs) and stock trading. While its CFD income comes from market making, spreads, and overnight financing, the company earns only from forex conversion and, partly, from interest on invested cash under its zero-commission stock trading model.
Out of the total revenue, almost £257 million came from trading, while the remaining £20.6 million was generated from client interest income. It also earned £1.68 million from its debit cards.
It, however, did not specify how much of the total revenue came from the legacy CFDs business and how much from its newly focused stock trading offerings.
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The latest UK revenue rise for Trading 212 came after the figure jumped 55 per cent in the previous year.
The company highlighted that this growth “continues to demonstrate the increasing popularity of technology-based trading and wealth-building apps that allow the "new" generation to manage their financial portfolios using tech that is both familiar to them, whilst removing significant costs of both entry and ongoing transaction-based costs.”
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Another Good Year for Trading 212
Other than the revenue and profit, the platform’s non-financial KPIs also received a massive boost.
The number of funded accounts on the platform jumped by 69 per cent last year, the average number of monthly active users increased by 84 per cent, and the total value of client money and assets combined jumped by 140 per cent.
Meanwhile, the company's costs also increased with the revenue. Its administrative expenses went up by 44 per cent to £163 million, while it spent almost £51.5 million on advertising and marketing, up from £39.5 million.
Its staff costs almost doubled to £15.8 million. It also appears to have gone on a hiring spree, with 122 employees by the end of 2025, up from 53 a year ago.