Before you hit “Start Trading”, ask yourself one question: can you really entrust your deposit to this company? Neither the advertising banners nor the glowing Finprime reviews provide the answer — and yet the answer is everything. In this piece, we’ll peel back the firm layer by layer: legal entities sharing a common root, a license valid only in El Salvador, and promises that can’t be verified.
Key Features
- Company Name: Finprime
- Website: https://finprime.pro/
- Available Contacts: [email protected]
- Foundation: 2025
- Services: Cryptocurrency trading
- License: CNAD
- Initial Deposit: $1
From Sign-Up to Payout
The Finprime official website looks ordinary. The problems start when you scroll past the imagery and look for the substance. The pages are stuffed with interchangeable slogans like “Built for Your Success” and “Smarter Trading, Every Time”. These kinds of pseudo-motivational, pretty phrases are most commonly found on dangerous and fraudulent platforms.
The registration process at Finprime itself is exemplarily simple, with not a single barrier in sight: first name, email, date of birth, country, phone number, citizenship, password, a checkbox for the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy — and that’s it. An email arrives next for email confirmation, after which you land in your personal account: you’re assigned a Client ID, a USDC wallet is opened with a zero balance, you’re given access to demo and real accounts, and you’re handed a to-do list — fill out your profile and upload KYC documents to get your account “approved”. So far, the company hasn’t raised any doubts.
Our Trading Experience With Finprime
In the personal account, there are the Trader Dashboard and My Accounts tabs, there’s a statistics block with zeros (Today’s closed P/L, Open P/L, Free Margin, and Profitability), there’s a line reading “My Positions — No trades yet”, but nowhere did we find a simple, obvious “Open Platform” or “Go to Terminal” button. The dashboard displays the results of trading that hasn’t even happened, while the entrance to the actual trading is camouflaged in such a way that we simply couldn’t find it. No “Trade Now”, no link to the web terminal, no client to download — the screen that should be displaying the charts and the order book remains a closed door without a handle for the user.
What’s especially strange is that even the demo mode turned out to be inaccessible at Finprime. There’s a Demo Accounts section in the menu, but we weren’t able to get from there to a live terminal and see what it even looks like. The result is a paradox: a company actively talking up its “professional-grade tools”, “Pro Charts”, and “sub-millisecond execution” doesn’t let you take a look at any of these tools beforehand. Verifying what’s been advertised is fundamentally impossible — first get through KYC, transfer the money, and then maybe they’ll show you the terminal.
The Reality Check
Let’s start with honesty, without which an investigation is worth nothing: one claim does check out. The registration under the number PSAD-0063 does indeed exist in the public registry of the Salvadoran regulator CNAD — it was entered on September 9, 2025, and is linked to the finprime.pro domain, and allows for the exchange of digital assets for fiat and other assets, the management of a trading platform, and the promotion of investment products in digital assets. The brand itself, meanwhile, is a label of a Salvadoran company in the DE C.V. format, positioned as a “next-generation crypto broker”.
Credit where credit is due: the license is real and verifiable in one click. But it’s important to understand its nature — this is a recent (less than a year-old) Salvadoran crypto registration, valid for digital assets within and out of El Salvador, not a European, British, or American status with a familiar system of investor compensation.
And from there, “Finprime’s global regulatory presence” falls apart at the very first push:
- The “license” in the United States is DTG Research LLC, operating under the “publisher’s exclusion”: by its own wording, it is NOT an investment advisor, only a publisher of analytics.
- Costa Rica (number 3-102-939906, DTN Sociedad) and Saint Lucia (number 2025-00191, DTGpro Ltd) are ordinary corporate registration numbers; neither jurisdiction licenses or oversees crypto or forex brokers, and incorporation isn’t regulation.
- The UAE boils down entirely to the line “backed by venture capital” — marketing, not oversight. In other words, the phrases “Multiple Licenses” and “Fully Regulated & Compliant” inflate one real crypto registration into a phantom global framework.
From here comes the main question: will the deposits be protected? On the surface, there’s a tangle of related entities: the Salvadoran “DE C.V.” plus DTG/DTN/DTGpro, scattered across a predominantly offshore map. The Salvadoran DASP covers digital assets — but the platform speaks in the language of lots, pips, and spreads, meaning it offers forex/CFD services, which this registration doesn’t cover and which none of the named regulators oversee. Add to that a domain less than two years old and the unverifiable “99.9%”, “sub-millisecond”, and “830 million traders” — and the picture comes into focus: a real but narrow crypto registration is being used as an umbrella, lending legitimacy to far broader and effectively unsupervised offshore activity.
How Long Has Finprime Been in the Game?
The company is young. The finprime.pro domain was registered on August 21, 2024, meaning that by the time of our analysis, the brand isn’t even two years old. The regulated part of the story is even shorter: the Salvadoran PSAD-0063 registration is dated September 9, 2025, and the first wave of publications and reviews came in the autumn of 2025 — before that, there are simply no traces of the company to be found. So in effect, the actual “tenure” is measured in months, not decades.
Against this backdrop, the website’s claims about “50+ Years Combined Experience” and a team that built a “new standard” for digital assets ring especially false. Formally, the “combined experience” of the employees and the age of the firm itself are two different things, and you can’t argue with the arithmetic. The platform has nothing in the way of a track record or test of time.
Extra Fraud Indicators
A very important additional red flag is the email address. We checked Finprime’s email, and it turned out to be a fake. In effect, everywhere the company lists a contact, it’s one you can’t actually use to reach the platform’s tech support. It’s also important to add that this is the only channel of communication besides the social media accounts.
Rounding out the picture is the thing platforms like these typically use to cover their tracks — a stream of “positive” reviews. All of them are written by the same hand from the same template: no specific instrument, no sums, no dates, no details about interactions with support — just vague phrases like “sits nicely between beginner and advanced” and “just smooth trading”.
Is Finprime the Right Fit?
You shouldn’t trust a platform that has no name, no reputation, and no guarantees of reliability. There are crypto exchanges far more reliable and time-tested than the subject of our review.





This is some kind of murky crypto exchange. Personally, I think it’s a CFD broker, not a crypto exchange, since the conditions are like those of a forex dealer. And that means there should be a more serious license than El Salvador. If this is a crypto exchange, then where is it on the lists at Coingecko or Coinmarketcap? I don’t see it anywhere. All in all, some kind of hidden, potential scam. I steer clear of stuff like this and recommend no one go near it.
Are you having problems with withdrawals too? I’ve been waiting more than a week now for them to send out my USDC in Erc20. How do I get FinPrime to speed up the process? Or is this a flat-out scam? Give me an answer, whoever knows. What should I do? They aren’t responding to me in the live chat on my personal account.