The forex world is loud. Thousands of forex websites compete for your attention with broker reviews, signal services, market analysis, and educational content — and most of them aren’t worth your time. The right forex websites can dramatically shorten your learning curve, sharpen your trading, and keep you safe from scams. The wrong ones drain your time, your money, or both.

This is a curated directory of the forex websites genuinely worth bookmarking, organized by what they do best. None of these sites pay to be listed here. The picks are based on accuracy, depth, longevity, and how often serious traders actually use them.
Forex News Websites
Currency markets move on news. The fastest, most accurate news sources are the ones professional traders monitor in real time.
Reuters Forex News — The gold standard for financial news. Reuters reporters are first on the ground for central bank announcements, economic releases, and geopolitical events that move currencies. If a central bank makes an unexpected statement, Reuters has it before anyone.
Bloomberg — Premium financial news with deep currency market coverage. The terminal version is for institutions, but Bloomberg.com itself offers excellent free coverage of FX moves, central bank policy, and macro analysis.
Financial Times Markets — Strong on European and global macro analysis. Particularly valuable for tracking ECB policy, UK economic data, and emerging market currency stories.
Forex Factory News — Trader-focused news aggregator with timestamps and impact ratings. Less polished than Reuters or Bloomberg but built specifically for forex traders watching event-driven moves.
Economic Calendar Websites
Every serious trader has an economic calendar open during their trading session. These three are the standards.
Forex Factory Calendar — The trader’s calendar. Filterable by impact level, currency, and event type. Free, fast, and what most professional traders actually use.
Investing.com Economic Calendar — Comprehensive coverage with consensus forecasts and historical data for every event. The detailed event pages help you understand context, not just the numbers.
Trading Economics — Excellent for emerging market data and longer-term economic indicators. Particularly useful for traders watching specific countries beyond the majors.
For currency-specific events affecting our Vietnamese dong analysis or other regional currencies, Trading Economics often has data the larger calendars miss.
Forex Education Websites
Beyond FastCashForex, these forex websites are worth knowing about for education.

Investopedia Forex Section — The general-purpose financial education encyclopedia. Strong on terminology, fundamentals, and beginner concepts. Their forex content isn’t the deepest, but it’s reliable for definitions and basics.
BabyPips School of Pipsology — One of the longest-running forex education sites. The “School of Pipsology” course is comprehensive and structured for true beginners.
DailyFX Education — IG-owned education site with strong technical analysis content and weekly market analysis from professional traders.
For our own structured approach, we offer guides covering everything from what forex trading is for absolute beginners to advanced trading strategies for experienced traders.
Regulatory and Safety Websites
These are non-negotiable bookmarks. Before trusting any broker, signal service, or managed account with your money, verify them at these sources.

Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) — US regulator for forex and futures. Their Smart Check tool lets you verify any registered firm or individual.
National Futures Association (NFA) — Industry self-regulatory body. Their BASIC system is free and shows the regulatory history of any registered forex firm.
Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) — UK regulator. Their register is the gold standard for verifying UK-regulated brokers.
Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) — Australian regulator. ASIC oversight is widely respected internationally.
FinCEN MSB Registrant Search — Verify any US-based money services business, including currency dealers. Critical when buying physical foreign currency.
For deeper coverage, see our guide on warning signs of forex fraud and our explainer on the National Futures Association.
Forex Charting and Analysis Websites
The platforms traders actually use for charts and analysis.
TradingView — The most popular charting platform on the internet, period. Free tier is genuinely useful, paid tiers add features serious traders need. Built-in social aspect means you can follow successful traders’ analysis in real time.
Myfxbook — Connects to your trading account and tracks performance with verified results. Also hosts an enormous community of traders sharing strategies and analysis. Critical for evaluating signal services and copy trading providers — verified results don’t lie.
ForexFactory Forums — The largest active forex trading forum. Quality varies wildly, but specific subforums (Trading Systems, Trading Discussion) host genuine discussion among working traders.
For our own approach to charting and indicators, see our technical analysis complete guide.
Currency Data and Research Websites
When you need specific data on currency pairs, exchange rates, or monetary policy.
XE.com — The standard reference for current and historical exchange rates. Their currency converter is what most travelers and casual users default to.
OANDA Historical Rates — Detailed historical exchange rate data going back decades. Essential for backtesting strategies or analyzing currency trends.
Bank for International Settlements (BIS) — The central bank’s central bank. Reports here cover currency markets at a level above retail trading. The triennial FX market survey is the definitive source on global FX volume.
IMF Exchange Rate Database — International Monetary Fund data on currencies, central banks, and global economics. Useful for emerging market and exotic currency research.
Forex Broker Review Websites
Beyond our own best forex brokers comparison, these forex websites offer additional broker analysis.
ForexBrokers.com — In-depth annual broker reviews with consistent methodology. Their “Best of” categories are well-researched.
Forex Peace Army — Trader-submitted broker reviews. Good for spotting patterns of complaints, especially regarding withdrawal issues. Take individual reviews with skepticism but patterns are revealing.
BrokerChooser — Comparison tool with detailed pros/cons for hundreds of brokers globally.
For our specific broker categorizations, see NFA-registered forex brokers, ECN forex brokers, and brokers that offer MT5.
Central Bank Websites
For monetary policy decisions that move currency markets, go to the source.
Federal Reserve — US central bank. FOMC meeting calendars, statements, and economic projections move USD pairs more than almost any other source.
European Central Bank — ECB policy decisions drive EUR pairs.
Bank of England — BoE decisions move GBP pairs.
Bank of Japan — BoJ policy is critical for JPY pairs and broader risk sentiment in Asian sessions.
State Bank of Vietnam — Important reference for anyone tracking emerging Asian currencies, particularly the Vietnamese dong.
FastCashForex’s Own Resources
For organized access to our content, these hub pages are the best starting points:
- Forex Education Hub — Our complete educational structure organized by topic and skill level
- Currency Trading Guide — Beginner-friendly overview of how currency trading works
- Currency Trading Tips — Ten essential lessons for new traders
- Forex Risk Management Guide — The skill that separates traders who last from traders who blow up
- Useful Resources — Tools, calculators, and reference content
How to Use This Forex Websites Directory
Different forex websites serve different purposes, and the smart approach is matching the site to the task at hand.
For daily trading sessions: Forex Factory calendar, TradingView for charts, Reuters or Bloomberg for breaking news.
For weekly market preparation: DailyFX or TradingView analysis articles, central bank speech calendars, IMF/BIS data for macro context.
For broker selection: ForexBrokers.com, Forex Peace Army for complaint patterns, plus the relevant regulator’s verification tool.
For learning specific topics: Investopedia for terminology, BabyPips for structured beginner education, our own deep-dive guides for technical and fundamental analysis.
For verifying anyone before sending money: CFTC, NFA, FCA, ASIC depending on jurisdiction. Always verify before, not after.
Forex Websites to Be Cautious Of
A directory like this would be incomplete without warnings. Some categories of forex websites consistently produce more harm than value:
“Get rich quick” course sellers — If a site promises specific profit numbers (“$10,000 in 30 days”) or features Ferrari/yacht imagery, the courses are usually worthless and the testimonials usually fake.
Unregulated signal services — Most paid signal services don’t outperform free demo trading. Verified track records are rare. Marketing is usually loud, results are usually quiet.
“Forex robot” review sites — The robot review industry is largely affiliate-driven. Most “best EA” articles are paid placements, not genuine evaluations.
Currency revaluation prediction sites — Anyone telling you the Iraqi dinar, Vietnamese dong, or another emerging currency is about to “revalue” by 1000% is running a scam. We covered this in detail in our investing in Vietnamese dong guide.
Anonymous trading “gurus” — Real successful traders rarely teach. The ones who do almost always have verifiable backgrounds, real names, and verified track records. Anonymous “millionaire traders” on social media usually aren’t either.
The pattern across these categories: extraordinary claims, urgency to buy, and lack of verifiable credentials. Any of these forex websites matching that pattern is worth skipping no matter how slick the marketing looks.
The right forex websites compound over time. A trader who reads Reuters, watches the Forex Factory calendar, charts on TradingView, verifies brokers at NFA, and learns from Investopedia and structured education sites will be better-equipped than 95% of retail traders within a year. The wrong forex websites can drain time and money for a decade and leave you no closer to consistent trading.
Bookmark the right ones. Skip the rest. Trade safer.
What to Read Next
- Best Forex Brokers: How to Choose the Right One
- How to Choose a Forex Broker
- Warning Signs of Forex Fraud
- Currency Trading: A Smart, Easy Start for Beginners
Disclaimer: Forex trading involves substantial risk of loss and isn’t suitable for everyone. The information provided through any of the linked forex websites should be evaluated independently and shouldn’t be taken as investment advice. Always verify regulatory status before sending money to any forex service. Never trade with money you can’t afford to lose.





