Tickz Signup: How to Create an Account Safely
Before You Sign Up
Check three things first: that Tickz accepts traders from your country, that you understand the offshore licence, and that you can afford to lose what you plan to deposit. Then move on to the form.
Country eligibility checks
Tickz is operated by Trusteo Ltd at Bonovo Road, Fomboni, Island of Moheli, 1257, Comoros Union, under a MISA (Mwali International Services Authority) licence. That licence does not cover the United States, Canada, or most of the European Union, so the signup form usually rejects those countries at the country-select step. Using a VPN and a false country to bypass the block is a terms-of-service violation that almost always surfaces during KYC and freezes any funds already deposited. Check your home country against the eligibility list before filling in anything else.
Age and identity requirements
Most regulators set 18 as the minimum trading age, and offshore brokers follow the same rule for KYC. You will need a valid government ID for verification before withdrawals open, so confirm the document is in date and matches the name you plan to register with.
- Confirm your country is not on the typical blocked list (US, Canada, most of the EU)
- Be at least 18 years old, or the legal minimum in your jurisdiction if higher
- Have a valid government ID (passport, national ID, or driving licence) ready for KYC
- Decide a deposit budget you can lose without hitting rent or savings
- Pick an email you control long-term, not a throwaway address
Demo-first expectation
Tickz routes new accounts to the demo balance by default, so signup does not commit money — you are creating an identity, not funding a wallet. Plan to spend a few days on demo before depositing anything. Trading carries real risk and you can lose more than you deposit. Tickz is licensed offshore (MISA, Comoros) — investor protection is weaker than under CySEC/FCA/ASIC. Some third-party reviews describe Tickz as a binary-options broker with 30-second timeframes and 70-90% payouts, while the official site positions it as general trading — confirm the order types in-app before risking real money.
Check eligibility, ID, deposit budget, and the offshore licence before you fill in the form.
How to Create a Tickz Account
The signup form sits on https://tickz.com/ and takes under five minutes. Use a real name and a real email — fake details break verification later and lock your funds in.
App or web registration
The web form and the Tickz app (Android package com.tickz on Google Play, plus iOS via the App Store) share the same backend, so either path produces the same account. Pick the device you plan to trade on most — the registration session usually becomes the first trusted device for 2FA, which means it is the path of least friction long-term. Avoid registering on a shared or public machine; the cookies and saved passwords from that session are a liability if someone else uses the device later.
Email and password setup
The form takes an email, a password, and your country of residence. Use a real long-term inbox you control, since password resets and KYC updates all run through that address.
- Open https://tickz.com/ in a browser and click Sign Up, or open the Tickz app and tap Register
- Enter your email and create a strong password (12+ characters, unique to Tickz)
- Select your country of residence — this drives compliance rules and available payment methods
- Accept the terms and privacy policy after reading the risk section
- Submit the form
Account confirmation steps
After submission, Tickz sends a confirmation link to the email on file. Click it within an hour, log back in, and you will land on the demo account by default. If the form rejects your country, do not switch the country to a permitted one to get past the block — that mismatch will surface during KYC and freeze the account. Stop and look for a regulated alternative instead. Confirmation emails sometimes land in spam, so check there before requesting a resend.
Real name, real country, strong password, verified email — then you are inside the platform.
Verification and KYC
Tickz allows trading on a small deposit before KYC, but withdrawals stay locked until you upload ID and proof of address. Complete verification before depositing anything significant.
Documents to prepare
KYC (Know Your Customer) is a regulatory step every broker uses, including offshore ones. Tickz follows the standard pattern: government ID, recent utility bill or bank statement, and sometimes a selfie or short video. Gather all of it before opening the upload panel so you finish the submission in one session — partial uploads can time out and force a restart.
- Government ID — passport, national ID card, or driving licence, photographed in good light
- Proof of address — utility bill or bank statement under 90 days old, showing the same name and address
- Selfie check — a clear photo holding the ID, or a short video confirming you are the account holder
- Payment method — the card or wallet you deposit from must be in your name
Profile accuracy
Every field on the signup form has to match the ID exactly: full legal name, date of birth, address, and country. A typo from registration becomes a rejected KYC submission later, and on an offshore broker each re-submission adds days to the withdrawal timeline. Open the profile section of account settings before uploading anything and fix any mismatches there first. Match the address on the proof-of-address document to the address shown on the profile.
Limits before verification
Tickz lets you trade on a small deposit before KYC clears, but withdrawals stay locked until verification is complete. That asymmetry is intentional and is also how some offshore brokers trap deposits — accounts can fund the platform but cannot pull cash back until paperwork is finished. Complete KYC before depositing anything significant, and contact [email protected] if the approval email does not arrive within three business days.
Match ID, address, and payment method to the signup details, then wait for the email confirming KYC is clear.
Demo Account Versus Real Account
The demo balance is virtual cash for learning the platform. The real account uses your deposit. Demo profits are not predictive of real profits because you behave differently when nothing is at stake.
Practice mode after signup
Tickz drops new accounts straight into the demo balance on first login. That balance is preloaded with virtual currency, can be reset from account settings, and uses the same chart engine and asset list as the live account. The goal in this phase is not profit but familiarity — find the order ticket, the timeframe selector, the stop-loss field, and the account-mode toggle so you do not fumble those controls when real money is on the line. A few days here removes the platform-mistake category entirely.
When real trading unlocks
The real account opens after you complete the first deposit and clear KYC for withdrawals. The deposit triggers the live wallet; KYC unlocks the cash-out path.
- Real-side deposits often start at around $10 per third-party reviews
- Spreads and execution on demo can differ from live, especially on fast-moving pairs
- Psychology shifts when real money is on the line — winning trades on demo often turn into losers in live
- Test the deposit-and-withdraw flow with a tiny amount before scaling up
Why demo should come first
Demo profits are not predictive of real profits, but demo losses are also free, which is the entire point. Once you switch to real, start with the minimum deposit (around $10 according to third-party reviews) and only scale after several weeks of consistent execution. Many users skip demo and lose their first deposit to platform mistakes — a wrong size, a wrong direction, a missing stop. Those are exactly the errors a few demo sessions catch for free.
Use demo to learn the platform, not to validate a strategy — live execution will look different.
First Steps After Signup
After signup, finish KYC, enable 2FA, deposit the minimum to test the workflow, and place a small first trade on a liquid asset. Then withdraw a portion to confirm the cash-out path works.
Check fees and withdrawal rules
The deposit-and-withdraw cycle is the most important test on any offshore broker. Many complaints on platforms like WikiFX trace back to users who deposited heavily and only tried to withdraw months later, when an issue surfaced. Open the payments panel and read the deposit and withdrawal fees, the minimum withdrawal amount, the processing window per method, and any bonus terms — bonus money usually carries trading-volume conditions that can lock the original deposit until the volume target is hit.
Test charts and signals
Once KYC is in, run the full live workflow on a small budget before scaling. The objective is to confirm execution and the cash-out path, not to make money on the first trade.
- Complete KYC and confirm the approval email landed
- Deposit the minimum (around $10 per third-party reviews) using a payment method in your name
- Place a small trade on a liquid asset like EUR/USD or gold to see fees, slippage, and execution speed
- Watch any in-platform signal or copy-trading feature run for a day before acting on it
- Request a partial withdrawal back to the same method and time how long it takes
Set account security controls
Enable 2FA in the security panel — prefer an authenticator app like Authy or Google Authenticator over SMS, save the backup codes outside that phone, and check the active-sessions list. A new account is a fresh attack surface, and the first week is when most credential-stuffing attempts hit. If the test withdrawal clears within the published window, you have a working setup; if it stalls, push through support before any further deposits.
Verify, secure, deposit small, trade small, and test the withdrawal — only then increase your exposure.
Common Signup Issues
The two most common signup blockers are an unsupported country and a mismatch between signup details and the ID later uploaded for KYC. Both are fixable only by starting clean with correct data.
Unsupported country
The most common signup blocker is a country Tickz does not serve. The MISA (Comoros) licence does not extend to the United States, Canada, or most of the European Union, so the country dropdown excludes those choices and any IP from those regions can fail at submission. A VPN workaround does not survive KYC — the ID later uploaded will name a country the platform cannot accept, and any deposited funds become a recovery problem. If your country is rejected, look for a CySEC, FCA, or ASIC broker for that jurisdiction rather than forcing it.
Verification mismatch
The second-most-common blocker is data that does not match the uploaded ID. The fix is to start clean with correct data — not to argue with the verification team.
- Name mismatch — the full legal name on the form must match the ID exactly, including any middle name shown
- Date of birth mismatch — small typos here are surprisingly common and always rejected
- Stale proof of address — utility bills must be under 90 days old
- Duplicate account — creating a second account to fix a problem usually triggers a permanent lock; fix the first one
Login or email problems
If the email verification link never arrives, check spam first, then request a resend, then contact [email protected] from the registered address. A rejected phone number is usually a format issue — use the international format with country code, no spaces or dashes. If the platform locks you out mid-signup, do not retry repeatedly — that can flag the account as suspicious. Contact support with your registered email and any error message you saw, and wait for a response before opening any new attempts.
Country, email, phone format, ID match — fix the cause once, do not retry with new accounts.
Frequently asked questions
Is Tickz signup free?
Yes, creating a Tickz account costs nothing. You only commit money when you fund the real account, where third-party reviews report a minimum deposit around $10. The demo balance is preloaded with virtual cash and resets on request, so the learning phase has no out-of-pocket cost. KYC verification is also free, though it requires a valid government ID and a recent proof of address.
Can US or EU residents sign up for Tickz?
Tickz typically restricts US, Canada, and EU residents because the MISA (Comoros) licence does not cover those jurisdictions. The signup form usually rejects those countries at the country-select step. Using a VPN and a false country to bypass the block is a terms-of-service violation and almost always surfaces during KYC, which freezes any funds already deposited. A regulated CySEC, FCA, or ASIC broker is the safer route for those regions.
How long does Tickz KYC verification take?
Verification usually takes one to three business days once all documents are uploaded correctly. Delays come from blurry ID photos, expired utility bills, or a name mismatch between the signup form and the ID. Submit a clear passport or national ID, a utility bill or bank statement under 90 days old, and a selfie matching the ID. Track progress in the verification panel of account settings.
What is the minimum deposit on Tickz?
Third-party reviews report a minimum deposit of approximately $10, low compared to most regulated brokers. The minimum varies by payment method and country, so check the actual figure shown at the deposit screen in your account. Even though the minimum is low, only deposit money you can afford to lose entirely — Tickz is licensed offshore (MISA, Comoros) and investor protection is weaker than under CySEC, FCA, or ASIC.
Do I need to deposit during signup?
No. The Tickz account opens with a demo balance immediately after email verification. You can use the demo to learn the platform, test order types, and run a few practice trades before depositing anything. Once you are ready, deposit the minimum (around $10) and complete KYC to unlock withdrawals. Many traders skip demo too quickly — a few days there saves real losses caused by platform mistakes.