If you have suffered investment losses due to Interactive Brokers fraud, margin liquidation issues, unauthorized transactions, or other misconduct, you may have legal options to recover your money. Interactive Brokers LLC is one of the largest electronic brokerage firms globally, serving over 2 million customer accounts. However, the firm’s extensive regulatory history reveals a troubling pattern of compliance failures, supervisory deficiencies, and customer harm that has resulted in tens of millions of dollars in fines from FINRA, the SEC, the CFTC, and OFAC.
At Varnavides Law, we represent investors who have lost money due to Interactive Brokers misconduct and hold the firm accountable through FINRA arbitration. Attorney Gary Varnavides spent 10 years at Sichenzia Ross Ference LLP defending broker-dealers from investor claims. Now he uses that insider knowledge to fight for investors seeking to recover their losses from major firms like Interactive Brokers.
Key Takeaways
- Regulatory History: Interactive Brokers has paid over $50 million in fines to FINRA, the SEC, the CFTC, and OFAC since 2020 for various compliance failures
- Recent Enforcement: FINRA fined Interactive Brokers $2.25 million in December 2024 for allowing 4.2 million free-riding violations over seven years
- Common Claims: Margin liquidation issues, options approval failures, unauthorized transactions, and sanctions violations are among the most common investor complaints
- Recovery Option: Most Interactive Brokers customers must pursue FINRA arbitration to recover investment losses due to mandatory arbitration clauses
- Time Limit: FINRA arbitration claims must generally be filed within 6 years of the transaction or event causing the loss
Interactive Brokers Regulatory Record and FINRA BrokerCheck
Interactive Brokers’ regulatory history provides critical context for investors evaluating potential claims. According to FINRA BrokerCheck, Interactive Brokers LLC (CRD #36418) has been a FINRA member firm since January 1995 and is headquartered in Greenwich, Connecticut. The firm is registered with the SEC, 24 Self-Regulatory Organizations, and 53 U.S. states and territories.
The firm’s disciplinary history spans multiple categories of violations, from anti-money laundering failures to supervisory deficiencies and sanctions violations. Understanding this regulatory backdrop helps investors recognize that their losses may not simply be the result of market conditions, but rather the consequence of firm negligence or compliance failures.
| Interactive Brokers Information | Details |
|---|---|
| FINRA CRD Number | #36418 |
| Member Since | January 1995 |
| Headquarters | Greenwich, Connecticut |
| Registered States | 53 U.S. States and Territories |
| SRO Registrations | 24 Self-Regulatory Organizations |
Recent Interactive Brokers Regulatory Actions and Fines
Interactive Brokers has faced significant regulatory enforcement actions across multiple agencies in recent years. These actions demonstrate patterns of conduct that may support investor claims for recovery of their losses.
December 2024: $2.25 Million FINRA Fine for Free-Riding Violations
According to FINRA, Interactive Brokers agreed to pay a $2.25 million fine for failing to detect and prevent customer free-riding activity across millions of transactions over a seven-year period. The investigation revealed that between October 2015 and December 2022, Interactive Brokers allowed 4,229,709 instances of free-riding in customer cash accounts, demonstrating significant supervisory failures.
August 2025: $650,000 FINRA Fine for Options Approval Failures
FINRA fined Interactive Brokers $650,000 for failing to exercise proper due diligence before approving certain self-directed customers to trade options. The sanctions stem from deficiencies spanning more than five years, between November 2019 and December 2024. FINRA found that the firm’s automated account approval system was not reasonably designed to detect when options trading might be inappropriate for certain customers.
July 2025: $11.8 Million OFAC Settlement for Sanctions Violations
Interactive Brokers agreed to pay $11,832,136 to settle with the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) for 12,367 violations of various sanctions programs between July 2016 and January 2024. The violations involved providing brokerage services to customers in sanctioned jurisdictions including Iran, Cuba, Syria, and Crimea, as well as processing trades in securities subject to Chinese Military-Industrial Complex sanctions.
May 2025: $400,000 FINRA Fine for Complaint Reporting Failures
FINRA announced that Interactive Brokers would pay $400,000 to settle claims it failed to report regulatory complaints and customer grievances regarding the functionality of its virtual platform to FINRA over an 11-year period. From January 2020 through at least June 2022, the firm failed to accurately report statistical and summary data on written customer complaints.
2023: $20 Million CFTC Fine for Recordkeeping Failures
The CFTC ordered Interactive Brokers to pay a $20 million civil monetary penalty for recordkeeping and supervision failures related to widespread use of unapproved communication methods. The firm admitted to the facts detailed in the order.
2023: $35 Million SEC Fine for Recordkeeping Violations
Interactive Brokers Corp. and affiliate Interactive Brokers LLC agreed to pay a $35 million penalty as part of the SEC’s charges against 10 firms for widespread recordkeeping failures. The firms admitted that employees communicated through personal text messages about business matters, and the firms failed to maintain or preserve the substantial majority of these off-channel communications.
2020: $15 Million FINRA Fine for AML Failures
Interactive Brokers was censured and fined $15 million by FINRA for deficient Anti-Money Laundering procedures and supervision failures relating to money transfers. The firm failed to investigate and file Suspicious Activity Reports when appropriate, including failing to detect Ponzi schemes and market manipulation schemes.
| Year | Agency | Fine Amount | Issue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dec 2024 | FINRA | $2.25 million | Free-riding violations |
| Oct 2024 | FINRA | $475,000 | Securities lending violations |
| Oct 2025 | FINRA | $125,000 | Municipal securities violations |
| Aug 2025 | FINRA | $650,000 | Options approval failures |
| Jul 2025 | OFAC | $11.8 million | Sanctions violations |
| May 2025 | FINRA | $400,000 | Complaint reporting failures |
| 2023 | CFTC | $20 million | Recordkeeping failures |
| 2023 | SEC | $35 million | Recordkeeping failures |
| 2023 | FINRA | $3.5 million | Execution and supervision violations |
| 2020 | FINRA | $15 million | AML compliance failures |
Common Types of Interactive Brokers Fraud and Misconduct Claims
Investors file claims against Interactive Brokers for various forms of misconduct. Understanding the common claim types helps you identify whether your situation may warrant legal action.
Margin Liquidation Claims
Interactive Brokers’ automated margin liquidation system has been the subject of numerous investor complaints. Customers have alleged that flawed, inefficient liquidation systems caused auto-liquidation of portfolios at prices inferior to the National Best Bid/Best Offer. Some investors claim the firm failed to offer fair prices during margin liquidations, resulting in a death spiral where forced selling caused additional losses.
Options Trading Approval Failures
FINRA found that Interactive Brokers’ automated account approval system was not reasonably designed to detect when options trading might be inappropriate for certain customers. As a result, the firm approved customers for options accounts despite red flags indicating that options trading carried risks beyond their financial profiles or experience.
Unauthorized Transactions
In June 2024, a FINRA arbitration panel awarded a customer full damages, interest, and attorney fees against Interactive Brokers for unauthorized money transfers. The case involved criminals who accessed the customer’s online account and transferred funds without authorization to an account in the UK. The firm took no responsibility for compliance failures.
System and Platform Failures
On April 4, 2025, Interactive Brokers systems experienced a technical issue causing incorrect display of elevated margin requirements. Customers reported erroneous liquidation warnings that led them to close positions prematurely, resulting in financial losses that could have been avoided with accurate information.
Undisclosed Margin Loans
Some customers have reported being unaware that certain transactions created margin loans. Investors have discovered they were paying interest on loans they did not know they had, with funds depleted over time without clear disclosure at the time of the transaction.
Free-Riding Violations
FINRA found that Interactive Brokers allowed over 4.2 million instances of free-riding in customer cash accounts over seven years. Free-riding occurs when customers purchase securities and sell them before paying for the original purchase, which violates federal securities regulations.
Fund Withdrawal Issues
Customers have filed complaints alleging Interactive Brokers refused to release cash for extended periods despite having no outstanding trades, margin loans, or securities positions with the firm.
Warning Signs of Interactive Brokers Misconduct: Unexpected margin calls or liquidations, difficulty withdrawing funds, unexplained account activity, erroneous system messages leading to position closures, options approval without adequate verification of your experience, or undisclosed fees and loan charges.
FINRA Arbitration Awards Against Interactive Brokers
Investors have successfully recovered losses from Interactive Brokers through FINRA arbitration. Understanding prior arbitration results helps demonstrate that claims against the firm can succeed.
June 2024: Unauthorized Transfer Award
A FINRA arbitration panel awarded a Virginia customer her full damages, interest, and attorney fees against Interactive Brokers regarding an unauthorized money transfer from her account. Criminals accessed the customer’s online account and transferred funds to an account in the UK without authorization. Interactive Brokers was found liable for compliance failures despite attempting to blame the customer.
2015 Margin Liquidation Award
In FINRA Case No. 12-02766, an arbitration panel awarded a customer $175,000 for auto-liquidations that occurred on January 12, 2011, plus $57,200 in interest. The panel also awarded $285,000 for auto-liquidations on August 5, 2011, plus $77,000 in interest, and $72,418 for expert witness fees and costs. The claimant alleged that Interactive Brokers’ flawed margin auto-liquidation system caused liquidation at prices inferior to the best available market prices.
FINRA Arbitration Success Rate: According to FINRA Dispute Resolution Statistics, 84% of customer arbitration cases closed through settlement or paid damages in 2024, demonstrating that investors can successfully recover losses through arbitration.
How to File a Claim Against Interactive Brokers Through FINRA Arbitration
Most Interactive Brokers customers are bound by mandatory arbitration clauses in their customer agreements. This means you generally cannot file a traditional lawsuit but must instead pursue your claim through FINRA arbitration. While this may seem like a disadvantage, FINRA arbitration actually offers several benefits for investors, including faster resolution and lower costs than traditional litigation.
The FINRA Arbitration Process
FINRA (Financial Industry Regulatory Authority) administers the largest dispute resolution forum in the securities industry. The arbitration process is designed to resolve investor disputes more quickly and cost-effectively than traditional litigation.
The FINRA arbitration process follows a structured timeline:
- Step 1: Statement of Claim – Your attorney files a detailed Statement of Claim documenting your losses, the firm’s misconduct, and the legal basis for your claim. This initiates the formal arbitration process.
- Step 2: Response and Discovery – Interactive Brokers files an answer to your claim. Both sides exchange relevant documents and information during the discovery phase.
- Step 3: Panel Selection – A panel of arbitrators is selected from FINRA’s roster. For claims over $100,000, panels typically consist of three arbitrators.
- Step 4: Hearing and Award – Both sides present evidence and testimony at the arbitration hearing. The panel issues a binding decision, typically within 30 days of the hearing’s conclusion.
Why Interactive Brokers May Be Liable for Your Losses
Under securities regulations, brokerage firms have a duty to maintain adequate supervisory systems and protect customer accounts. When those systems fail, the firm can be held liable for resulting investor losses. Interactive Brokers’ extensive regulatory history demonstrates a pattern of compliance failures that may support investor claims.
Firm Liability Theories
- Failure to Supervise: Interactive Brokers must establish and maintain supervisory systems to detect and prevent misconduct and compliance failures. The firm’s repeated FINRA fines for supervisory deficiencies demonstrate systemic problems.
- System Design Negligence: The firm may be liable for losses caused by flawed trading systems, including margin liquidation algorithms that execute at unfavorable prices or incorrect margin calculations.
- Breach of Contract: Interactive Brokers may be liable for violating the terms of customer agreements, including obligations to provide accurate account information and properly execute transactions.
- Negligent Account Security: When unauthorized access results in customer losses, the firm may be liable for inadequate security measures or failure to detect and prevent fraudulent transfers.
What You Need to Prove in an Interactive Brokers Claim
To recover investment losses through FINRA arbitration, you must generally establish certain elements depending on your specific claim type.
| Claim Type | Key Elements |
|---|---|
| Margin Liquidation Claims | System executed liquidation at prices materially inferior to market, failure to provide reasonable notice, breach of duty of best execution |
| Unauthorized Transactions | Transactions occurred without your authorization, firm failed to implement adequate security measures, breach of customer agreement |
| Options Suitability | Firm approved options trading without adequate verification of your financial situation, experience, or investment objectives |
| System Failures | Platform malfunction caused erroneous information leading to trading decisions, firm failed to promptly correct system errors |
| Breach of Contract | Firm violated terms of customer agreement, failure to perform contractual obligations, resulting damages |
Why Choose Varnavides Law for Your Interactive Brokers Claim
Attorney Gary Varnavides brings a unique perspective to securities litigation. Having spent 10 years at Sichenzia Ross Ference LLP defending broker-dealers from investor claims, he understands exactly how firms like Interactive Brokers build their defenses. Now he uses that insider knowledge to fight for investors seeking to recover their losses.
Insider Knowledge
Gary knows how major brokerage firms think, prepare their defenses, and approach arbitration. He spent a decade on the other side and understands their strategies inside and out.
Proven Credentials
Recognized as a Super Lawyers Rising Star from 2015-2023, placing Gary among the top 2.5% of attorneys in the NY Metro area based on peer recognition and professional achievement.
Multi-State Practice: Licensed in California and New York, allowing representation of Interactive Brokers clients across multiple major financial centers. Learn more about our securities law practice.
Client-Focused Approach: We handle most cases on a contingency basis, meaning no attorney fees unless we recover money for you. We fight to maximize your recovery.
Time Limits for Interactive Brokers Claims
If you have suffered investment losses with Interactive Brokers, time limits apply to your ability to recover. FINRA arbitration claims are generally subject to a 6-year eligibility period, meaning you must file your claim within 6 years of the transaction or event giving rise to your dispute.
Additionally, many types of securities claims have shorter statutes of limitations under state or federal law. For example, federal securities fraud claims under Rule 10b-5 must generally be brought within 2 years of discovering the fraud (or when you should have discovered it) and no more than 5 years after the violation occurred.
Do Not Delay: Waiting too long to pursue your claim can result in losing your legal rights entirely. If you have experienced Interactive Brokers investment losses, consult with a securities attorney promptly to understand your options and applicable deadlines.
Documents to Gather for Your Interactive Brokers Claim
Strong documentation supports your claim and helps demonstrate the extent of your losses. Begin gathering the following materials:
- Account Statements: Monthly or quarterly statements showing account activity, holdings, and value changes
- Trade Confirmations: Individual transaction records showing the details of each trade, including margin transactions
- Account Agreement: The customer agreement you accepted when opening your Interactive Brokers account
- Margin Disclosures: Any margin agreements, disclosures, or notifications received from the firm
- Platform Screenshots: Screenshots of any error messages, incorrect margin calculations, or system failures
- Communications: Emails, chat logs, or other communications with Interactive Brokers customer service
- Activity Log: Records of login attempts, unauthorized access alerts, or security notifications
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I sue Interactive Brokers for investment losses?
Most Interactive Brokers customers cannot file traditional lawsuits due to mandatory arbitration clauses in their customer agreements. However, you can pursue your claim through FINRA arbitration, which is often faster and more cost-effective than litigation. An experienced securities attorney can evaluate whether any exceptions to the arbitration requirement apply to your case.
How long does a FINRA arbitration against Interactive Brokers take?
FINRA arbitration typically resolves in 12-18 months from filing to award. This is significantly faster than traditional court litigation, which can take 2-5 years. Complex cases involving significant discovery or technical issues may take longer.
What is the time limit to file a claim against Interactive Brokers?
FINRA arbitration claims must generally be filed within 6 years of the transaction or event giving rise to your dispute. Federal and state securities laws may impose shorter deadlines for certain claims. Consult with a securities attorney promptly to ensure you do not miss applicable deadlines.
Can I recover losses from Interactive Brokers margin liquidations?
Yes, investors have successfully recovered losses from Interactive Brokers for flawed margin liquidations. If the firm’s automated systems executed liquidations at prices materially inferior to market prices, or if the firm failed to provide accurate margin information, you may have a valid claim.
What if my Interactive Brokers account was hacked?
If unauthorized individuals accessed your account and transferred funds without your authorization, Interactive Brokers may be liable for inadequate security measures or failure to detect and prevent fraudulent activity. A FINRA arbitration panel awarded a customer full damages against Interactive Brokers in 2024 for unauthorized transfers.
How much does it cost to pursue an Interactive Brokers claim?
We handle most securities arbitration cases on a contingency fee basis, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover money for you. You remain responsible for case costs such as filing fees, expert witnesses, and deposition expenses. Schedule a free consultation to discuss your case and fee arrangement.
What is free-riding and why did FINRA fine Interactive Brokers for it?
Free-riding occurs when a customer purchases securities in a cash account and sells them before paying for the original purchase. FINRA fined Interactive Brokers $2.25 million because the firm allowed over 4.2 million instances of free-riding over seven years, demonstrating significant supervisory failures.
How do I check Interactive Brokers’ regulatory history?
You can check Interactive Brokers’ regulatory history on FINRA BrokerCheck at brokercheck.finra.org by searching for CRD #36418. The report shows the firm’s regulatory actions, customer complaints, and disciplinary history.
Take Action on Your Interactive Brokers Investment Losses
If you have experienced Interactive Brokers investment losses due to margin liquidation issues, unauthorized transactions, system failures, or other misconduct, you may have a valid claim for recovery. The firm’s extensive regulatory history demonstrates a pattern of compliance failures that may support your case.
Attorney Gary Varnavides understands how major brokerage firms like Interactive Brokers defend against investor claims because he spent 10 years on the other side. Now he uses that insider knowledge to hold firms accountable and recover losses for investors.
Schedule Your Free Consultation
Contact Varnavides Law today to discuss your Interactive Brokers investment losses. We will review your situation, explain your legal options, and help you understand whether you have a viable claim for recovery through FINRA arbitration.
Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice.