Quotex promo codes and bonuses: read this first
A promo code can add funds or perks to your account, but a bonus is rarely free money. The conditions attached can lock your own deposit. Here is how codes work and how to judge whether one is worth accepting.
How promo codes work
A Quotex promo code is a string you enter to claim an offer — typically a deposit bonus or a perk on a qualifying deposit. Entering a valid code applies the benefit to your account. So far so good; the part that matters is not the headline number but the terms printed underneath it.
The conditions that matter
Almost every bonus carries conditions. The key one is a turnover (wagering) requirement: a multiple of the bonus, and sometimes your deposit, that you must trade before bonus-linked funds can be withdrawn. There can also be time limits and caps. These terms are where a "100% bonus" becomes a commitment rather than a gift.
How a bonus can lock your withdrawal
If you accept a bonus and then try to withdraw before meeting its conditions, your withdrawal can be restricted or the bonus reversed. This is the single most common bonus complaint. Accepting a bonus is a decision to trade more, not a way to get extra money for free.
Are bonuses worth using?
Run a simple test before accepting: would you make these trades without the bonus? If the only reason you would trade more is to clear a turnover requirement, the bonus is steering your behaviour in a risky direction. Many cautious users decline bonuses precisely to keep their funds flexible and their costs predictable.
Avoiding fake codes and offers
- Only trust codes shown through official Quotex channels.
- Ignore "exclusive" codes from strangers promising guaranteed profit — a classic scam hook.
- Never pay anyone to "activate" a bonus or to trade on your behalf.
Frequently asked questions
You normally enter the code in the promo or deposit section of your account. If it is valid, the benefit is applied to a qualifying deposit. Always read the attached conditions before you accept, because they can affect your ability to withdraw.
It is a rule that you must trade a multiple of the bonus (and sometimes the deposit) before you can withdraw bonus-related funds. A high turnover requirement can lock your money and push you to overtrade, which increases the chance of losses.
Sometimes, but often not. If a bonus forces you to trade far more than you intended just to unlock your own funds, declining it keeps your money flexible and your risk lower. Never let a bonus be the reason you deposit more than you can afford to lose.