Vantedge Group Review and Website Analysis

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Vantedge Group - logo

The company calls itself a next-generation multi-asset online broker for professional trading, as well as a platform that takes the complexity upon itself so that traders can focus on profits.

Vantedge Group Review and Website Analysis

We are breaking down the scam company Vantedge Group, which since January 2026 has been actively luring traders with attractive promises and awards for “best broker of 2022”. The paradox is that the platform itself is three years younger than these awards, and its only contact email turned out to be nonexistent upon verification. Buckle up — in this review we will be peeling back the layers of this matryoshka doll and showing how a fake broker disguises itself as a legitimate market player.

Brief Overview

  • 🖥Official Website: vantedgegrp.com
  • ✈️Contact Address: –
  • 📞Customer Support: support@vantedgegrp.com
  • 🔐Licensing and Accreditation: –
  • ⏳Track Record: 2026
  • 🧰Specialization: brokerage service
  • 🤝Terms of Cooperation: $250, 1:1000
  • 💰Additional Services: bonuses, analyst, personal manager, membership of the expertly-managed account payouts, daily markets, signals

Vantedgegrp.com Examination

The official website vantedgegrp.com is a storefront built from a cheap template that was thrown together in a couple of evenings. Even at first glance, a brokerage resource like this does not look professional or polished. Vantedge Group clearly did not make an effort to create a quality website.

The first screen greets you with loud slogans and an image of a nighttime metropolis. Along the bottom, a ticker crawls with prices for the S&P 100, EUR/USD, Bitcoin, Ethereum, and Tesla. The images of a laptop and a phone are stock photos that can be found on Google in a second. The exact same images appear on hundreds of other scam websites.

Vantedge Group - website

We go to “About Us” and read a copywriting masterpiece at the level of a college freshman. Not a single concrete fact. What “experts” are being mentioned? What is the founder’s name? Where is the headquarters located? How many clients do they serve? When did Vantedge Group begin operations? In which countries do they have offices? What is the business model? What about regulation? All important information about the company is simply absent.

For comparison, here is what this looks like at legitimate brokers. Pepperstone writes on its About Us page: founded in 2010 by Owen Kerr and Joe Davenport in Melbourne, headquarters at 161 Collins Street, serving over 400,000 clients in 170 countries, with a daily trading volume of $12.57 billion. IC Markets states: founded in 2007 in Sydney, ASIC license No. 335692, and annual turnover exceeding $1 trillion. The subject of our review has nothing.

The legal documentation is a story in itself. The website footer has a “Legal” link, but if you are expecting to find Terms & Conditions, a Privacy Policy, an AML Policy, a Risk Disclosure, and a Client Agreement there — think again. All of Vantedge Group’s legal documents are only available after registering for a personal account or upon request via email.

There is nothing in the official website’s footer. All it says is: “The website is owned and operated by Vantedge group, a renowned global brand dedicated to providing a satisfying trading experience”. No company number, no country of registration, no jurisdiction, no license, and no address.

Company Contacts

Vantedge Group offers only two email addresses: one for technical support and one for legal inquiries. However, verification showed that both emails effectively do not exist. They are fake. If you try to contact the company’s managers through them, you will not succeed.

Fake email

So how can you reach the broker’s managers? We do not know, since there are no other contact options. Vantedge Group does not list a phone number, has no online chat or social media accounts, and does not use any messengers. The only option left is to enter your contact details in a dedicated callback form.

Key Conditions

Now let’s examine the trading conditions, which is where it becomes clear that Vantedge Group is a platform designed to extract money through psychological pressure on the client. The first thing that jumps out is that the company has a full seven account tiers: Basic ($250), Bronze ($10,000), Silver ($25,000), Gold ($50,000), Platinum ($100,000), Emerald ($250,000), and VIP ($1,000,000). Each successive tier requires exponentially more money, but in return promises magical “improved conditions”.

On the starter tier, you get “access to a wide selection of instruments”, “basic analytical tools”, “standard support”, as well as vague line items for “Swap”, “Commission”, and “Spread” — without a single number. This is truly a masterpiece: the broker writes the word “Spread” in the account conditions but does not indicate how many points that spread actually is.

To get “priority support”, “advanced analysis tools”, “zero deposit commissions”, and 1:500 leverage, you need to put down $10,000. That is a jump of 40 times the minimum deposit right away. With a deposit of over $25,000, Vantedge Group promises:

  • “enhanced trading signals”,
  • “access to premium research”,
  • a personal portfolio manager,
  • “weekly webinars”,
  • “daily one-on-one calls with an In-Depth analyst”,
  • 1:800 leverage,
  • “access to 5 markets”,
  • “bonus up to 25%”,
  • “Islamic account”.

The more expensive tiers come with more services and better conditions. Moreover, each specific item in the conditions is either a violation of the law (risk-free trades, 100% bonuses, or asset management without a license), a hidden trap (1:1000 leverage guarantees you blow your account), or a marker of covert abuse (a withdrawal commission applies everywhere except Gold and above — which means below that tier it is very high). The commission on trades is not specified at all.

Exposing Vantedge Group

By this point, if you have been reading the previous sections carefully, everything is already clear without further explanation. What we have before us is a classic scam, assembled from a template used by thousands of similar outfits around the world. However, let’s tighten the screws once and for all and examine the three most damning details that put the final period on this case: the absence of a license, the absence of a legal address, and the actual lifespan of the operation.

Let’s start with the most important point. Vantedge Group has no license whatsoever. None at all. Not a single one. Nowhere. Why regulation matters for a brokerage company:

  • To hold client funds separately from the company’s operational funds.
  • To be a member of a compensation fund.
  • To publish annual audited financial reports.
  • To assist clients in disputed situations.

This entire system exists for one purpose: to protect your money if something goes wrong. The subject of our review has no regulation of any kind — it operates illegally.

A safe and verified broker is also required by law to list the full legal address of the company’s registration. The address must be real — it is the legal location where the company can be found, where a court summons can be sent, and where auditors come to visit. Vantedge Group has no address.

And now — the third nail in the coffin. The platform’s lifespan. It is listed nowhere. This in itself is a red flag. At any normal broker, the founding date is the first thing they boast about. Saxo Bank: “Founded in 1992”. IG Group: “Founded in 1974 in London”. Interactive Brokers: “Since 1977”. Pepperstone: “Founded in 2010”. IC Markets: “Since 2007”. This answers the trader’s most fundamental question: “How long has this outfit survived on the market, and has it passed the test of time?”

Domain

The real age surfaces when you check the domain through WHOIS. The domain registration date is January 23, 2026. The expiration date is January 23, 2027 (paid for only one year — the cheapest option). It was updated on February 10, 2026.

What Reviews Do Users Leave?

Online reputation is also of great importance. For example, on Trustpilot, Vantedge Group has exactly 16 reviews over its entire existence, and all of them are glowing: 94% five-star, 6% four-star, and zero negative. The rating is 4.5. It looks great, but once you actually read the texts themselves, the entire construct falls apart in half a minute.

Mohammad from Australia writes about a “raw ECN account”, “TradingView integration”, an “MT5 desktop app for Vantedge group”, deposits via an “ANZ debit card”, and withdrawals through “Osko” — an Australian instant payment system. Hold on. Vantedge Group has neither MetaTrader 5, nor TradingView, nor ECN accounts — the website says nothing about any of this.

In other words, the reviews describe functionality that does not exist at this broker. This is a classic sign of fake comments. The remaining reviews are similar in nature: there is no real evidence that the company processes withdrawals or plays fair.

Conclusions

Vantedge Group is a textbook example of a fraudulent company. Any single item from this analysis — the absence of a license, the dead email addresses, 1:1000 leverage, or the fake reviews — is sufficient on its own to shut the broker’s website down permanently.

Pros/Cons

  • None.
  • No registered address or licenses are listed—the company is operating illegally.
  • Very short operating history.
  • Fake positive reviews online.
  • The listed email addresses do not exist, and no other contact information is provided.

FAQ

How is Vantedge Group different from the actual Vantage Markets, and am I confusing the two?

These are two completely different outfits, and confusing them is exactly the trap that this scam's entire design is built around. Vantage Markets is a legitimate Australian broker, founded in 2009, holding licenses from ASIC (AFSL 428901), the FCA (FRN 590299), CIMA, VFSC, and FSCA, with offices in Sydney, London, and Dubai, and a million clients worldwide. The subject of our review is an anonymous website a few months old, without a license, without an address, without a legal entity, created in January 2026 specifically to parasitize off the similarity in names. A difference of a few letters — "ed" instead of "age" — is a classic typosquatting technique: the calculation is that an inattentive user will see a similar logo, similar colors, and think "oh, this is that same Vantage I've heard about, a reliable firm". In reality, these companies are not connected in any way — neither legally, nor operationally, nor even geographically.

What will happen to my documents and passport information if I complete the verification process here?

Nothing good — your passport scans, selfies with your ID, utility bills, and other KYC data become merchandise on dark web forums, where a set of "verified identity" documents sells for $50 to $200. This data is used to take out microloans in your name, register cryptocurrency exchanges under your identity for money laundering, make purchases with stolen cards, and commit other crimes. While you are waiting for a "withdrawal from your account", your documents may already be involved in several schemes simultaneously — and tracking this is virtually impossible. Urgent steps to take: place a credit freeze through credit bureaus, and change the passwords on all email accounts associated with these documents.

Is it worth answering calls from Vantedge Group “managers” just to get a better understanding of the situation?

Absolutely not — it is a direct path into a fraud funnel, even if you consider yourself someone with nerves of steel and critical thinking skills. Managers at outfits like these undergo serious training in NLP techniques, social engineering, and sales psychology; their conversation is structured to break down any initial "no" within 15 to 20 minutes. They will talk about "exclusive opportunities", "entry available today only", and "a special discount on the VIP tier just for you" — all of these are triggers that the brain responds to involuntarily. If your number has already ended up with them, block all their numbers, do not answer calls from unknown numbers, and do not read their emails. Silence and ignoring them is the only correct strategy for dealing with scammers; they will turn any dialogue to their advantage.
Helen Prescott

Helen, a graduate of the University of Kent with a degree in Journalism and Mass Communication, has a keen eye for uncovering financial fraud.

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Reviews: 1
  1. Larry

    I almost fell for this scam. I wanted to register an account with Vantage but somehow ended up at Vantedge Group. I was lucky that the look of the official website made me suspicious. I checked this company, and it turned out to be a scam. Phew, I almost sent my personal data and money to scammers. Be careful!

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