Where can you trade natural Gas in America?
To trade natural gas in America, you need a futures broker.
| Name | Logo | Futures Commission | Minimum deposit | GMG Rating | Customer Reviews | CTA | Feature | Expand |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Futures Commission $0.25 to $0.89 |
Minimum deposit $2,000 |
GMG Rating |
Customer Reviews |
Account Types:
|
|
|||
|
Futures Commission $0.49 to $0.89 |
Minimum deposit $100 |
GMG Rating |
Customer Reviews |
Visit Platform Trading in futures involves the risk of loss. |
Account Types:
|
|
Is now a good time to trade Natural Gas in America?
Michael Brown, Chief Market Strategist at Pepperstone, told us that Natural gas is a different ‘kettle of fish’ to crude, not least considering that Qatar, the world’s largest supplier, has suspended production for the time being. The length of any such suspension is key for the outlook here, though markets have wasted no time in pricing supply disruptions, with TTF futures having rallied well over 50% since that suspension was announced.
Is Natural Gas trading safe in America?
Yes, derivatives based on natural gas—such as futures and options traded on exchanges—are regulated separately by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), which supervises U.S. futures markets and exchanges like the Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
How do you trade Natural Gas in the USA?
Natural gas futures in the United States are mainly traded on the New York Mercantile Exchange (NYMEX), which is part of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange Group.
The benchmark contract is the Henry Hub Natural Gas futures contract (ticker: NG), which tracks the price of natural gas delivered to Henry Hub in Louisiana, the key pipeline junction that acts as the pricing benchmark for U.S. gas markets.
The contract size is 10,000 million British thermal units (mmBtu) and prices are quoted in U.S. dollars per mmBtu. The minimum price movement is $0.001 per mmBtu, equivalent to $10 per contract.
Contracts are listed for all 12 calendar months and trade nearly 24 hours a day on the CME Globex electronic platform. The contracts are physically settled, meaning that if held to expiry they result in delivery of natural gas at Henry Hub.
Because of their large contract size and price volatility, Henry Hub futures are widely used by energy producers, utilities, hedge funds and traders to hedge exposure to natural gas prices or speculate on movements in the U.S. energy market.

Richard is the founder of the Good Money Guide (formerly Good Broker Guide), one of the original investment comparison sites established in 2015. With a career spanning two decades as a broker, he brings extensive expertise and knowledge to the financial landscape.
Having worked as a broker at Investors Intelligence and a multi-asset derivatives broker at MF Global (Man Financial), Richard has acquired substantial experience in the industry. His career began as a private client stockbroker at Walker Crips and Phillip Securities (now King and Shaxson), following internships on the NYMEX oil trading floor in New York and London IPE in 2001 and 2000.
Richard’s contributions and expertise have been recognized by respected publications such as The Sunday Times, BusinessInsider, Yahoo Finance, BusinessNews.org.uk, Master Investor, Wealth Briefing, iNews, and The FT, among many others.
Under Richard’s leadership, the Good Money Guide has evolved into a valuable destination for comprehensive information and expert guidance, specialising in trading, investment, and currency exchange. His commitment to delivering high-quality insights has solidified the Good Money Guide’s standing as a well-respected resource for both customers and industry colleagues.







