Chapter: Turnkey Solutions

B2Broker (B2Prop)

3.5

PARTIAL FIT

B2Broker assembles platform (B2Trader), CRM (B2Core), liquidity (B2Prime), copy trading, and prop-firm challenges into the deepest single-vendor concentration in this chapter - fast to deploy, costly to exit.

scorecard

B2Broker (B2Prop)

Atlas score

3.5

Best for

  • Operators building a net-new multi-asset brokerage who want a single vendor covering platform through prop
  • UAE and DMCC operators valuing a DIFC-domiciled technology vendor
  • Crypto-forward brokers needing FX/CFD and digital-asset deployment under one commercial relationship

Not for

  • MT4/MT5-committed operators who need only a CRM or liquidity overlay
  • Cost-sensitive startups unable to sustain multi-line contracts across five product categories
  • Operators requiring confirmed MiFID II reporting before contract signature

Pros

  • Single-vendor stack speed: B2Trader, B2Core, B2Prime, B2Copy, and B2Prop are pre-integrated, reducing launch coordination across five otherwise separate vendor contracts.
  • DIFC Dubai HQ gives UAE and DMCC operators native in-market proximity and a non-offshore vendor domicile for regulatory governance assessments.
  • 150+ documented PSP, KYC, and antifraud integrations within B2Core reduce third-party payment and compliance onboarding effort at launch.
  • Crypto Exchange Turnkey is available alongside the Forex Broker Turnkey - operators expanding into digital assets can stay within the same vendor ecosystem.
  • B2Prop module enables a prop-firm challenge vertical to be layered onto the retail brokerage stack without introducing an additional vendor relationship.

Cons

  • Lock-in concentration risk is the highest in this chapter: five interdependent product lines (platform, CRM, liquidity, copy trading, prop) mean any single swap triggers a cascade across the others.
  • Pricing is entirely quote-based across all product lines - no published anchors available, and multi-product bundle discounting structures are opaque until late in the sales cycle.
  • B2Core's MiFID II transaction reporting capability is not itemized in public materials - CySEC CIF operators must resolve this during procurement, not after deployment.
  • Simultaneous multi-product contract renewals across all five lines create a concentrated lock-in pressure point that operators should negotiate as staggered individual terms.
  • Stack coherence is highest when B2Trader is also in use; operators with existing MT4/MT5 commitments seeking only the CRM or liquidity layer get sub-optimal fit.

Pricing teardown

Pricing not publicly disclosed — contact vendor for a quote.

Quote-only; see body for details.

Editorial commentary

Who they are

B2Broker was founded in 2014 and is today headquartered primarily in Dubai (DIFC, Emirates Financial Towers), with regional teams in Cyprus, Hong Kong, and other financial centers. It is one of the more product-diversified vendors in this chapter: a single commercial relationship with B2Broker can span liquidity prime brokerage (B2Prime), trader CRM (B2Core), copy trading (B2Copy), and prop-firm challenge infrastructure (B2Prop). The turnkey proposition is therefore a meta-bundle across multiple B2Broker product lines rather than a discrete, separately packaged SKU.

Within Brokerage Atlas, B2Broker appears in four chapters: prop firm tech, broker CRMs, IB management, and this turnkey chapter. The turnkey review is not a re-review of individual products; it addresses what a broker receives when assembling the full B2Broker stack.

What is actually in the package

The B2Broker turnkey bundle includes: the B2Trader multi-asset trading terminal (FX/CFD, crypto, perpetual futures), B2Core as the Trader’s Room / back-office CRM, B2Copy for copy-trading functionality, B2Prime liquidity aggregation across 10 asset classes, and B2Prop for prop-firm challenge deployment. PSP coverage is broad - vendor materials reference 150+ integrations across payment systems, KYC/antifraud providers, and helpdesk tools. KYC/AML handoff is documented through integrations listed in the B2Core module rather than via a named single-vendor KYC partner.

A Crypto Exchange Turnkey is also offered alongside the standard Forex Broker Turnkey - covering spot and margin crypto for operators expanding into digital assets. Vendor materials reference deployment of a crypto broker “in under a month” as a time-to-market claim; the forex broker turnkey timeline is not separately published but consistent market signals suggest 4 - 8 weeks for a configured deployment. These figures are from vendor materials and are not independently verified.

Pricing reality

Pricing is entirely quote-based and not publicly disclosed across any B2Broker product line. The B2Prop pillar review notes entry-level prop-challenge pricing around $1,000/month when B2Core CRM is already deployed - this is the only partial pricing signal available. Full turnkey bundles are expected to be materially higher and structured as multi-product contracts where bundle discounting reflects the breadth of products licensed. B2Broker is not positioned at the low-cost entry tier of this category. Operators should budget for multi-line commercial conversations rather than a single-product quote.

Jurisdictional fit

B2Broker’s primary operational footprint has shifted toward Dubai (DIFC), where the main holding entity is domiciled. CySEC-adjacent commercial activity is present - the company exhibits at iFX EXPO Cyprus across multiple cycles and maintains Cyprus team resources. B2Prime’s CySEC status should be confirmed independently per current regulator filings; the CySEC licensing position as referenced in the broker-CRM review is not fully documented in available public materials.

For DMCC and DFSA operators in the UAE, the DIFC HQ provides native proximity. Offshore deployment (SVG, Vanuatu, Marshall Islands) is a documented use case for B2Broker’s turnkey offering - the vendor’s crypto-exchange turnkey and prop-firm modules serve offshore-licensed entities routinely per general market signals. MiFID II transaction reporting compatibility within B2Core should be confirmed during procurement and is not itemized in current public documentation.

The lock-in question

B2Broker’s turnkey represents one of the deepest single-vendor concentrations in this chapter. The trading platform (B2Trader), CRM (B2Core), liquidity (B2Prime), copy trading (B2Copy), and prop challenge (B2Prop) are distinct products under a single vendor relationship, each with its own contract and pricing. Swapping the trading platform alone would require a CRM re-integration, IB data migration, and likely a liquidity routing rebuild. Swapping the CRM would break the IB tree, the client portal, and the B2Prop challenge attribution. The documented 150+ integrations are integrations into B2Broker’s own product ecosystem, not portable connectors that survive a platform migration.

Migration exit cost is not publicly documented. The practical switching cost - across simultaneous contracts for five interdependent product lines - is the highest concentration risk in this review set. Operators should evaluate this against the genuine time-to-market benefit of a pre-integrated stack, and should negotiate individual contract lengths to avoid simultaneous renewal lock-in across all five product lines.

Where this breaks down

B2Broker’s turnkey is most coherent for operators who want the full stack and are comfortable with single-vendor concentration as an operational model. It is not well suited to brokers with existing MT4/MT5 platform commitments who want only the CRM and liquidity layers - the B2Core integration value is highest when B2Trader is also in use, and standalone B2Core for an MT4 operator is a sub-optimal fit per the broker-CRM chapter analysis. Cost-sensitive startups without the budget for multi-product contracts across five lines will find the aggregate spend uncomfortable. Operators building in CySEC-specific compliance requirements - particularly MiFID II reporting - should resolve B2Core’s transaction-reporting capability in the sales cycle, not after deployment.