🎉 Share Your 2025 Year-End Summary & Win $10,000 Sharing Rewards!
Reflect on your year with Gate and share your report on Square for a chance to win $10,000!
👇 How to Join:
1️⃣ Click to check your Year-End Summary: https://www.gate.com/competition/your-year-in-review-2025
2️⃣ After viewing, share it on social media or Gate Square using the "Share" button
3️⃣ Invite friends to like, comment, and share. More interactions, higher chances of winning!
🎁 Generous Prizes:
1️⃣ Daily Lucky Winner: 1 winner per day gets $30 GT, a branded hoodie, and a Gate × Red Bull tumbler
2️⃣ Lucky Share Draw: 10
Taiwan Investors Must Read: Proprietary Trading vs Overseas Brokers—The Big Reveal of US Stock Trading Fees
Many Taiwanese want to trade US stocks but are stuck on two issues: “Should I choose a cross-border agency or open an account with an overseas broker?” and “Which method is the most cost-effective?” Today, we will address these questions once and for all, using real numbers to show you how to choose the most economical option.
Which path to take? The fundamental differences between cross-border agency and overseas brokers
Cross-border agency (also known as entrusted trading of foreign securities) means you open an account with a domestic broker (like Fubon, Cathay, Yuanta, etc.), and they act as your agent to place orders in the US stock market. Since your order passes through two layers—“domestic broker → US stock market”—it’s called “cross-border agency.”
The advantages are clear: deposit in TWD directly, no need to exchange currency yourself, and your account is protected by Taiwan’s Financial Supervisory Commission. The downside is higher fees, usually between 0.15% and 1% of the transaction amount, with significant variation among brokers.
Overseas brokers are straightforward—you open an account directly with a US broker (like Mitrade, Interactive Brokers, Futu, etc.), place orders yourself, skipping the domestic broker intermediary. Most overseas brokers now offer zero or very low commissions, making them friendly for frequent traders. The cost is that you handle currency exchange and remittance yourself, which can add up.
How are the costs of cross-border agency and overseas brokers calculated?
For cross-border agency, your costs are divided into two parts:
Part 1: Direct broker fees
Part 2: Hidden costs
Using an overseas broker involves more cost items:
Additionally, for stocks paying dividends, a 30% withholding tax on cash dividends applies (partial tax refunds possible).
How do major cross-border agency brokers charge?
Below are the 2025 fee rates for major Taiwanese brokers (subject to change; confirm with customer service):
What do overseas brokers’ fees look like?
Major overseas brokers have significantly reduced trading costs:
Bank currency exchange and remittance costs (using banks like Taiwan Bank, UnionBank, etc.):
Which is cheaper? I’ve done the math for you
Comparing the cheapest options (cross-border agency with Fubon at 0.25%, overseas broker Mitrade with zero commission, and using Taiwan Bank for currency exchange):
(Note: USD to TWD exchange rate assumed at 1:30)
Key finding: When single transaction amounts exceed $6,000, overseas brokers become more cost-effective.
But there’s a hidden condition—this table assumes only one transaction. If you make 4 transactions per month (2 buys and 2 sells), the situation reverses: for $10,000, cross-border agency costs $100 (e.g., $25×4), while overseas brokers, having paid a one-time remittance fee of $11.67, will have no further commissions or remittance costs for subsequent trades. For frequent trading, overseas brokers are clearly better.
How to choose? A simple rule of thumb
Suitable for cross-border agency if:
Suitable for overseas brokers if:
Overseas brokers often offer a wider range of investment products, faster execution, and real-time order placement—additional value for serious investors. Cross-border agency’s advantages are simplicity, fund safety under Taiwanese regulation, and no language barriers.
Summary
Taiwanese investors mainly have these two options for US stock trading. Cross-border agency suits beginners and small investors—simple process but higher fees. Overseas brokers are better for large and active traders—lower costs but require handling currency exchange. The core difference: cross-border agency uses domestic broker as an agent, overseas brokers allow direct order placement. From a pure cost perspective, overseas brokers are more advantageous for large and frequent trading, while cross-border agency is more economical for small, occasional trades. Choose based on your trading habits and capital size—don’t get stuck in endless choice—what matters most is to start investing, not to keep debating the perfect method.