How We Rank
Two scores per provider. Critic (editorial) and Audience (user reviews). Both on a 5.0 scale.
Most "best signal provider" lists rank by affiliate commission rate. Our ranking system eliminates this by separating provider evaluation into two independent scores: a Critic Score (editorial assessment using six objective criteria) and an Audience Score (aggregated user reviews). Both are reported on a 5.0 scale alongside each provider. We use no affiliate links and accept no payment for inclusion.
Two Scores, Two Sources
Critic Score
The editorial score from Signal Provider Reviews. Six criteria, equally weighted, each scored 0.5 to 5.0 stars. The overall Critic Score is the unweighted average.
Source: Editorial deliberation against publicly verifiable data (audited competition results, hedge fund letters, SEC filings, AuditedTrader.com).
What it measures: Whether the provider's signals are credible based on the audit standard, signal structure, risk discipline, transparency, pricing, and platform quality.
Audience Score
The aggregated rating from real user reviews submitted to Signal Provider Reviews. Each user submits a 1.0 to 5.0 star rating with a written review. The Audience Score is the mean of all submitted ratings, displayed alongside the review count.
Source: User-submitted reviews aggregated on the provider's review page. Reviewers self-identify as subscribers or trial users.
What it measures: Real subscriber experience — signal accuracy in their account, support quality, value perception, platform usability.
Threshold: Audience Score is shown only for providers with 5 or more user reviews. Providers below this threshold show "N/A — Insufficient reviews" instead. This protects the score from small-sample noise.
Why two scores instead of one
The Critic and Audience scores measure different things. A provider can have audited championship-grade verification (high Critic) but poor real-world subscriber outcomes due to slippage, execution timing, or signal-format limitations (low Audience). Or vice versa: high audience satisfaction with a service whose underlying audit standard is weak.
The divergence between Critic and Audience is itself useful signal. When the two scores disagree, that is the moment to read the full review and the user reviews to understand why.
Most signal-review websites report only one score (either pure expert or pure user-aggregator). Reporting both is what differentiates Signal Provider Reviews and is the most honest way to evaluate a provider.
The Six Critic Criteria
1. Verified Performance
Can they prove their results through an independent third party? A perfect 5.0 requires independently audited competition results from a recognised body. Self-reported returns score no higher than 2.0.
| Stars | Standard |
|---|---|
| ★★★★★ | Third-party audited competition or fund results (World Cup, US Investing Championship, BarclayHedge audited) |
| ★★★★ | BarclayHedge ranked or audited fund with public track record |
| ★★★ | Live on-air trades with full history, or broker-verified statements |
| ★★ | Self-reported P&L with screenshots only |
| ★ | No evidence, or evidence of fabrication |
2. Signal Clarity
How actionable are the signals? Do they include specific entry prices, stop losses, take-profit targets, and conviction levels? A vague "I'm bullish on EUR/USD" is not the same as a structured signal with defined risk parameters.
| Stars | Standard |
|---|---|
| ★★★★★ | Structured format with entry, stop loss, take profit, conviction grade, and timeframe for every signal |
| ★★★★ | Entry and exit levels with stop loss on most signals |
| ★★★ | Entry levels provided, stop loss on some signals |
| ★★ | General direction only ("buy XYZ"), no specific levels |
| ★ | Vague commentary with no actionable trade parameters |
3. Risk Management
Does the provider help subscribers manage risk? This includes position sizing guidance, maximum drawdown expectations, portfolio allocation advice, and whether stop losses are standard practice rather than afterthoughts.
| Stars | Standard |
|---|---|
| ★★★★★ | Position sizing guidance, explicit stops on every trade, drawdown limits, portfolio-level risk framework |
| ★★★★ | Stop losses standard, position sizing discussed, drawdown history published |
| ★★★ | Stop losses on most trades, some risk guidance |
| ★★ | Occasional stop losses, no systematic risk framework |
| ★ | No risk management, encourages over-leveraging, or hides drawdowns |
4. Transparency
Does the provider explain their methodology? Do they share losing trades alongside winners? Do they maintain a complete public signal history?
| Stars | Standard |
|---|---|
| ★★★★★ | Full methodology published, reasoning with every signal, complete history including losses |
| ★★★★ | Strategy explained, most trades include reasoning |
| ★★★ | General approach described, some context |
| ★★ | Alerts only, minimal context |
| ★ | No methodology, deleted losses, misleading presentation |
5. Value for Money
Cost relative to what you receive. A $20/month service with verified performance across 6 markets scores higher than a $5,000/year service covering one market with self-reported results.
| Stars | Standard |
|---|---|
| ★★★★★ | Exceptional cost-to-quality ratio with verified signals across multiple markets |
| ★★★★ | Fair pricing for verified quality |
| ★★★ | Reasonable but with caveats |
| ★★ | Overpriced; methodology available cheaper elsewhere |
| ★ | Poor value; high cost with no verification |
6. Subscriber Experience
How is the actual experience of using the service? This covers signal delivery speed, platform or app quality, customer support responsiveness, onboarding process, and whether the provider offers educational resources alongside signals.
| Stars | Standard |
|---|---|
| ★★★★★ | Dedicated app or dashboard, instant signal delivery, responsive support, educational resources included |
| ★★★★ | Clean platform, timely delivery, good support |
| ★★★ | Functional delivery via email/Telegram, adequate support |
| ★★ | Delayed delivery, limited support, poor UX |
| ★ | Unreliable delivery, no support, no onboarding |
What We Exclude
We deliberately exclude factors easy to manufacture: social media following, Telegram subscriber counts, website design, marketing production value, and celebrity endorsements.
How Providers Get Reviewed
We research through public data, community feedback, regulatory filings, and where possible, direct subscription. Providers cannot pay to be listed, improve their score, or be removed. Users can also submit their own reviews with proof of subscription.
Updating Scores
Reviews update when material information changes — new verification data, regulatory action, pricing changes, or significant user feedback.