Skip to main content
Our Top Pick: Revolut — Best overall crypto bank for most users Open Account ↗ (affiliate)

How to Choose a Crypto Exchange in 2026

An 8-factor checklist for picking an exchange that fits your jurisdiction, risk tolerance, and use case.

SK
Reviewed by Stephan Kulik · Last updated: · How we rank

Key takeaways

  • Start with jurisdictional fit — an exchange must be legally available where you live.
  • After jurisdiction, evaluate custody + safety signals (PoR, audits, regulatory status) before optimizing fees.
  • Read the fee schedule, not the landing page. Spread markup on "simple" apps can be 1–2% invisible cost.
  • Never hold more on one exchange than you can afford to lose entirely.

The 8-factor checklist

  1. Jurisdiction — legally available where you live; accepts your fiat
  2. Custody & safety — PoR, audits, insurance, segregation
  3. Regulatory oversight — FCA / MiCA CASP / BaFin / FINMA / MAS / NYDFS / BitLicense
  4. Fees — base maker/taker, spread markup, deposit + withdrawal
  5. Liquidity — order-book depth at the volumes you trade
  6. Coin selection — does it list the coins you want?
  7. Withdrawals — flat fees, network support, withdrawal limits
  8. Support & exit — can you reach human support; can you get funds out under stress?

Factor 1 · Jurisdiction — the first filter

Start here because it is the hardest constraint. Ignore it and you will spend an afternoon on KYC only to be rejected, or worse — accepted, trade for a year, then be locked out during an enforcement action against the exchange.

  • US retail: Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, Binance.US, Bitstamp. NOT Binance global, NOT Bybit, NOT KuCoin (exited 2025), NOT OKX retail, NOT MEXC.
  • UK retail: Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp, Crypto.com. Restricted: Bybit, Gemini (exited 2026 → transferred to eToro), Binance (partial restrictions). Active FCA warnings on MEXC.
  • EU under MiCA: Coinbase, Kraken, Bitstamp, Binance (varies by country), Crypto.com. MiCA CASP authorization matters — see our MiCA guide.
  • Asia: jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction. Japan (JFSA), Singapore (MAS), Hong Kong (SFC), South Korea (FSC) all have distinct rules.

Factor 2 · Custody & safety

Post-FTX, custody is non-negotiable. Look for Proof of Reserves (what PoR actually proves), audited financials, explicit segregation of customer funds in Terms of Service, and insurance where available (SIPC-style insurance on Coinbase USD cash, for example).

Factor 3 · Regulatory oversight

An exchange registered with a credible regulator (FCA, BaFin, MiCA CASP, NYDFS BitLicense, FINMA, MAS) is materially safer than one with no primary regulator. Enforcement actions do happen (Binance $4.3B DOJ settlement 2023, Bittrex US closure 2023, Celsius bankruptcy 2022) but a regulated entity with a license to lose has stronger incentives to stay compliant.

Factor 4 · Fees (the detailed math)

See our full Exchange fees explained guide. Quick summary for 2026:

  • Spot order-book trading: 0.08%–0.60% taker at the lowest retail tier
  • "Simple app" quoted-rate trading: 1%–3% all-in with spread markup
  • Withdrawals: $0–$20 depending on coin, network, and exchange
  • Fiat deposits: free via SEPA / FPS, 3–4% via card

Factor 5 · Liquidity

For small trades (<$1K), virtually any major exchange has enough order-book depth. For large trades ($50K+), slippage matters — Binance, Coinbase, Bitstamp, OKX, Bybit are the deepest. A $100K market buy on a thin exchange can move the price 0.5%–1% against you.

Factor 6 · Coin selection

For BTC + ETH + top-50 coins, any major exchange works. For long-tail coins, new DeFi tokens, and pre-listing opportunities, Binance / Bybit / KuCoin / Gate.io are broadest. Coinbase and Kraken are more curated — fewer listings but fewer questionable ones.

Factor 7 · Withdrawals

Check three things: (a) flat withdrawal fee per coin, (b) supported networks (cheap Solana/Tron/Polygon vs expensive Ethereum L1 for stablecoins), (c) daily withdrawal limits by KYC tier. Some exchanges cap non-KYC or low-KYC accounts at ~$1K/day — a surprise when you need to move funds quickly.

Factor 8 · Support & exit

Test support BEFORE you fund. Open a ticket with a trivial question, see how long it takes to get a human. During market stress or regulatory action, support quality is what separates "I withdrew my funds in 24 hours" from "I am a FTX creditor".

Putting it together: a scoring rubric

Score each factor 0–3 (0 = dealbreaker, 3 = excellent). Drop any exchange that scores 0 on any of factors 1–3 (jurisdiction / custody / oversight). Rank the rest by combined score on factors 4–8. Our own best crypto exchanges ranking uses a version of this methodology.

Related reading

Frequently asked questions

What is the single most important factor when choosing a crypto exchange? +
Jurisdictional fit. An exchange that is licensed in your country and accepts your fiat currency beats one with better fees but unclear legal standing every time. Binance is cheap but not available to US retail; Coinbase is more expensive but fully US-compliant. Bybit is cheap but unlicensed for UK retail. Start by filtering for exchanges legally available where you live.
Are fees the second most important factor? +
Not quite. After jurisdiction, the second filter is custody and post-FTX safety signals — Proof of Reserves, segregation of customer funds, audited financials, insurance (where available), regulatory oversight. Fees matter a lot at scale (>$100K/month) but for most retail users the difference between a 0.1% and 0.4% fee is $3–$12 per $1,000 trade — worth optimizing for but not at the cost of safety.
Should I use one exchange or multiple? +
For balances under $10K, one well-chosen exchange is simplest. For $10K+, consider splitting across two exchanges in different jurisdictions — counterparty risk diversification. For $50K+, a hardware wallet for long-term holdings plus exchange(s) for active trading is standard practice. Never hold more on any single exchange than you can afford to lose entirely.
How do I evaluate if an exchange is "safe"? +
Look for: (1) regulated entity in a major jurisdiction (FCA, BaFin, MiCA CASP authorization, NYDFS BitLicense, FINMA, MAS), (2) public Proof of Reserves, (3) audited financial statements, (4) segregated customer funds explicitly in ToS, (5) track record — years operating without a breach or enforcement action, (6) independent custody (some exchanges custody with third parties like Coinbase Custody or BitGo). Any one of these is positive; the combination is strong.
Does coin selection matter? +
Only if you want specific coins beyond the majors. For BTC, ETH, and top-50 coins, any major exchange covers you. If you want long-tail altcoins, DeFi tokens, or new listings quickly, you may need a second exchange (Binance, Bybit, KuCoin, Gate.io cover the long tail best; Coinbase and Kraken are more curated).
What is the single biggest mistake people make? +
Picking based on the landing page, not the fee schedule. "Zero-fee trading!" usually means the spread markup is 1–2%. Always dig two clicks into the Fees or Trading Costs page before creating an account. Second biggest mistake: ignoring withdrawal fees on small balances — $5 to withdraw BTC is fine on a $5,000 balance but 5% on a $100 balance.
How long should I hold funds on an exchange? +
For active trading positions: as long as needed. For HODL-style long-term holdings: move to self-custody (hardware wallet) once you reach a threshold where exchange counterparty risk exceeds the friction of self-custody. Common threshold: $5K–$20K depending on risk tolerance. "Not your keys, not your coins" holds post-FTX: custodial exchanges are subject to fraud, hacks, and regulatory freeze.
What about decentralized exchanges (DEXes)? +
DEXes (Uniswap, dYdX, Curve, GMX) solve custody risk — you trade from your own wallet, no third party holds funds. Tradeoffs: (a) fiat on-ramp still requires a centralized exchange, (b) gas fees on Ethereum L1 can exceed trading fees for small trades, (c) slippage on low-liquidity pairs, (d) no recourse for mistakes. See our <a href="/cex-vs-dex/">CEX vs DEX guide</a>.
esc
↑↓ navigate ↵ open esc close