---
title: "Best Crypto Exchanges in the US 2026: Fees, Volume and Licenses Compared"
date: 2026-07-13
author: "Barry Elad"
featured_image: "https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/best-crypto-exchanges-in-the-us.jpg"
categories:
  - name: "Cryptocurrency"
    url: "/crypto.md"
tags:
  - name: "Reviews"
    url: "/tag/reviews.md"
---

# Best Crypto Exchanges in the US 2026: Fees, Volume and Licenses Compared

Coinbase processed **$1,162 billion** in trading volume in 2024 across 8.4 million monthly transacting users and **$404 billion** in assets on the platform, per its SEC 10-K. That scale makes it the volume leader among the centralized exchanges US residents can legally use, but volume alone does not settle which venue fits a given trader. The five leading US-available exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, Crypto.com and Binance.US) split along fees, liquidity, state licensing and supported assets, and crypto held on any of them is not FDIC-insured.

## Key Takeaways

- Coinbase Global reported **$1,162 billion** in trading volume in 2024, up from $468 billion in 2023, with **8.4 million** monthly transacting users, per its SEC 10-K.
- Coinbase Exchange holds CoinGecko trust-score rank **1** and a trust score of **10**, the top liquidity-and-quality rank among US venues at the June 21, 2026 snapshot.
- Binance.US announced spot fees of **0%** maker and **0.02%** taker on all pairs for every user on April 22, 2026, the lowest published base fee in the set.
- Kraken’s spot schedule starts at **0.25%** maker and **0.40%** taker, falling to **0.00%** maker at $10 million in 30-day volume.
- Gemini’s ActiveTrader schedule starts at **0.600%** maker and **1.200%** taker, with stablecoin pairs at **0.00%**.
- New York’s BitLicense framework took effect on August 8, 2015, and fewer than **50** licenses have been issued since.
- Crypto held on a US exchange is not FDIC- or SIPC-insured; only US customer cash sits at FDIC-insured banks, per Coinbase’s 10-K.

## Quick Picks

Coinbase Exchange holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 1 and a trust score of 10, and Coinbase Global reported $1,162 billion in trading volume in 2024 with 8.4 million monthly transacting users, per its SEC 10-K. The picks below lead on different criteria, from lowest fees to deepest US liquidity.

- **Best overall:** [Coinbase](#coinbase), ranks **1** on CoinGecko and led the set on US trading volume at **$1,162 billion** in 2024.
- **Best low fees:** [Binance.US](#binance-us), **0%** maker and **0.02%** taker on all pairs, with no portfolio minimum.
- **Best for active and pro traders:** [Kraken](#kraken), base **0.25%** maker dropping to **0.00%** at $10 million in 30-day volume.
- **Best for stablecoin swaps:** [Gemini](#gemini), **0.00%** maker and taker on listed stablecoin pairs.
- **Best rewards-and-app ecosystem:** [Crypto.com](#crypto-com). CoinGecko rank **15** with a trust score of **9**.

Exchange24h spot volume ($)Base maker / taker feeUS license postureCoinGecko trust rankBest forCoinbase$0.57 billionVaries by 30-day volumeNYDFS examined, state MTLs1Deepest US liquidityCrypto.com$0.43 billionVaries by tier and CRO stakingUS availability varies by state15Rewards and app ecosystemKraken$0.26 billion0.25% / 0.40%US-based, founded 20113Active and pro tradersGemini$0.01 billion0.600% / 1.200%NYDFS trust charter18Security-first, stablecoinsBinance.US$0.004 billion0% / 0.02%Separate US-licensed entity21Lowest feesBitstamp by Robinhood1,607 BTCTiered by 30-day volumeUS-available (Robinhood)7App-first on-rampSource: CoinGecko, Coinbase 10-K, Kraken, Gemini, Binance.US

 Top US Exchanges by 24h Spot Volume (USD) 24H SPOT VOLUME · Source: CoinGecko snapshot, June 21, 2026    24H SPOT VOLUME · COINLAW ANALYSIS Top US Exchanges by 24h Spot Volume (USD)    CoinGecko · 2026          0.6 0.45 0.3 0.15 0   $0.57B Coinbase  $0.43B Crypto.com  $0.26B Kraken    SOURCE CoinGecko snapshot, June 21, 2026      Each pick was scored across the weighted criteria in [How We Ranked](#how-we-ranked). The 24h volume figures use one consistent CoinGecko snapshot from June 21, 2026, so liquidity sits in the same comparable column for every venue.

> **By the numbers:** Coinbase Global’s SEC 10-K reported **$1,162 billion** in 2024 trading volume, **8.4 million** monthly transacting users and **$404 billion** in assets on platform, more than double the **$468 billion** in volume booked in 2023, a **148%** year-over-year jump driven by the institutional channel.

The table gives the snapshot. Here is how each exchange earns its place, starting with the volume leader.

## 1. Coinbase

 ![Coinbase Logo](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/coinbase-logo.jpg) 

 **8.9**/10 

  ★★★★★ ★★★★★ Editor’s Rating

 

 

 US crypto exchange · Ranked #1 of 5 CoinGecko rank 1 (trust score 10) 

 24h spot volume ~$0.57 billion (Jun 2026) 

 Base fees Vary by 30-day volume 

 US licensing NYDFS-examined; FDIC-insured cash 

 

 [ Visit Website ](https://www.coinbase.com/) 

 

 

 

Coinbase Exchange ranks 1 on CoinGecko with a trust score of 10, and carried about **$0.57 billion** in 24-hour spot volume at the June 21, 2026 snapshot, the deepest among US venues. Coinbase Global, the publicly traded parent (NASDAQ: COIN), reported $404 billion in assets on platform and $2,579 million in net income for 2024 in its SEC 10-K. That filing puts hard numbers behind the liquidity its rank implies.

Coinbase’s published trading fees vary by 30-day volume and by whether a customer subscribes to Coinbase One, and the exact base tier renders only behind an authenticated session, so it is not reproduced here as a fixed figure; the official help-center fee schedule carries the current tiers. On the regulatory side, the picture is documented. Coinbase’s custody subsidiaries are periodically examined by the New York State Department of Financial Services and by various states where they hold money transmission licenses, and the company holds US customers’ cash at FDIC-insured depository institutions, per its 10-K.

**Crypto is not FDIC-insured:** Only the US-dollar cash a customer holds at an exchange sits at FDIC-insured banks. The crypto itself carries custody and account-takeover risk and is not covered by FDIC or SIPC insurance if the platform fails or an account is compromised.



How a venue handles that custody risk feeds directly into the licensing score, and the [US and EU crypto custody rules](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-custody-regulations/) set the framework Coinbase and its peers operate under.

![Checkmark](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Deepest US liquidity and top CoinGecko trust rank (1, score 10).
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Publicly traded parent (NASDAQ: COIN) with SEC-disclosed financials.
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)US cash held at FDIC-insured banks; custody examined by NYDFS.



![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Base trading fees run higher than fee-leaders like Binance.US.
- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)The exact base fee renders only behind an authenticated session.





Coinbase leads on volume and assets. The next venue is the fee-and-tools choice for higher-frequency traders.

## 2. Kraken

 ![Kraken Logo](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/kraken-logo.jpg) 

 **8.5**/10 

  ★★★★★ ★★★★★ Editor’s Rating

 

 

 US crypto exchange · Ranked #2 of 5 CoinGecko rank 3 (trust score 10) 

 24h spot volume ~$0.26 billion (Jun 2026) 

 Base maker / taker 0.25% / 0.40% (entry) 

 Fee floor 0.00% maker at $10M 30-day volume 

 

 [ Visit Website ](https://www.kraken.com/) 

 

 

 

Kraken holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 3 with a trust score of 10, and recorded about **$0.26 billion** in 24-hour spot volume at the June 21, 2026 snapshot. Kraken’s spot schedule starts at 0.25% maker and 0.40% taker at the entry tier and falls to 0.00% maker and 0.10% taker once 30-day volume reaches $10 million, per its official fee schedule. The US-based venue, founded in 2011, holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 3, the second-highest rank among the US exchanges in this set behind Coinbase’s rank 1.

The tiered structure rewards volume directly. At $1 million in 30-day volume, Kraken charges 0.06% maker and 0.16% taker, and at $500 million the maker fee reaches 0.00% with a 0.05% taker fee. That steep glide path is why the venue scores well on the fee criterion for higher-frequency accounts even though its entry rate is not the lowest in the group.

![Checkmark](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Second-highest trust rank in the set (CoinGecko 3, score 10).
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Steep fee glide path: maker drops to 0.00% at $10M 30-day volume.
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)US-based venue operating since 2011.



![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Entry maker fee of 0.25% is not the lowest for low-volume accounts.
- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Crypto holdings carry no FDIC or SIPC insurance.





### Is Coinbase or Kraken better?

Coinbase ranks higher on liquidity, at CoinGecko rank 1 versus Kraken’s rank 3, and discloses far larger trading volume through its SEC 10-K. Kraken scores better for active traders whose 30-day volume clears the higher tiers, where its maker fee drops to 0.00%. Neither holds FDIC or SIPC insurance on crypto, so the choice turns on liquidity needs versus fee sensitivity, not deposit protection.

Kraken rewards high-volume traders. The next venue competes on a rewards-and-app ecosystem.

## 3. Crypto.com

 ![Crypto.com Logo](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/crypto-com-logo.jpg) 

 **7.5**/10 

  ★★★★★ ★★★★★ Editor’s Rating

 

 

 US crypto exchange · Ranked #3 of 5 CoinGecko rank 15 (trust score 9) 

 24h spot volume ~$0.43 billion (Jun 2026) 

 Base fees Vary by tier and CRO staking 

 US availability Varies by state 

 

 [ Visit Website ](https://crypto.com/) 

 

 

 

Crypto.com Exchange holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 15 with a trust score of 9, and carried about **$0.43 billion** in 24-hour spot volume at the June 21, 2026 snapshot, placing it second on liquidity among these venues despite a lower trust rank than Coinbase or Kraken. The platform pairs its exchange with a consumer app and card program, which is the basis of its rewards positioning.

Crypto.com’s exchange fees vary by 30-day volume tier and by how much CRO a customer stakes. The exact spot tiers render dynamically on the official fees-and-limits document rather than as a static figure, so they are not quoted here as fixed numbers; the official fees-limits page carries the current schedule. US availability and the product set also vary by state. Some Crypto.com products are limited or unavailable to residents of certain US states, which affects whether a given trader can access the full ecosystem.

![Checkmark](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Second-deepest liquidity in the set (~$0.43 billion 24h volume).
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Pairs the exchange with a consumer app and card rewards ecosystem.



![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Some products are limited or unavailable in certain US states.
- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Fee tiers depend on CRO staking and render dynamically, not as fixed rates.





Crypto.com spans an app-and-card ecosystem. The next venue leans on a New York trust charter and a security-first posture.

## 4. Gemini

 ![Gemini Crypto Logo](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/gemini-crypto-logo.jpg) 

 **7.1**/10 

  ★★★★★ ★★★★★ Editor’s Rating

 

 

 US crypto exchange · Ranked #4 of 5 CoinGecko rank 18 (trust score 8) 

 24h spot volume ~$0.01 billion (Jun 2026) 

 Base maker / taker 0.600% / 1.200% (entry) 

 Stablecoin pairs 0.00% maker and taker 

 

 [ Visit Website ](https://www.gemini.com/) 

 

 

 

Gemini holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 18 with a trust score of 8, and carried about **$0.01 billion** in 24-hour spot volume at the June 21, 2026 snapshot, the thinnest liquidity among the top five. Gemini’s ActiveTrader schedule starts at 0.600% maker and 1.200% taker, falling to 0.000% maker and 0.020% taker at **$250 million** in combined 30-day volume, while listed stablecoin pairs trade at 0.00% maker and taker, per its official fee schedule. The headline rate sits well above the group, but the stablecoin carve-out is competitive.

Gemini’s strongest argument is regulatory rather than price. The New York State Department of Financial Services approved Gemini’s limited-purpose trust charter in October 2015, the second such charter issued under the state’s virtual-currency framework. A trust charter is the alternative to a BitLicense under the same New York rules, and it signals a higher fiduciary bar than a money-transmitter registration alone.

> **Two-charter path:** Under New York’s framework, a firm may either obtain a BitLicense or proceed via a limited-purpose trust charter approved by the NYDFS. The first trust charter went to itBit (now Paxos) in May 2015, and Gemini received the second in October 2015. The distinction matters for traders weighing custodial governance, not just fees.

![Checkmark](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)NYDFS limited-purpose trust charter (approved October 2015), a higher fiduciary bar.
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Listed stablecoin pairs trade at 0.00% maker and taker.



![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Highest entry fees in the group (0.600% maker).
- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Thinnest liquidity among the top five (~$0.01 billion 24h volume).





Gemini leans on its trust charter. The last-ranked venue competes purely on near-zero fees.

## 5. Binance.US

 ![Binance.US logo](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/uploads/2026/07/binance-us-logo.jpg) 

 **7.0**/10 

  ★★★★★ ★★★★★ Editor’s Rating

 

 

 US crypto exchange · Ranked #5 of 5 CoinGecko rank 21 (trust score 8) 

 24h spot volume ~$0.004 billion (Jun 2026) 

 Base maker / taker 0% / 0.02% (all pairs) 

 Account minimum None 

 

 [ Visit Website ](https://www.binance.us/) 

 

 

 

Binance.US holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 21 with a trust score of 8, and carried about **$0.004 billion** in 24-hour spot volume at the June 21, 2026 snapshot, the thinnest liquidity in the ranked set. It competes on cost. Binance.US announced spot trading fees of 0% maker and 0.02% taker on all pairs, available to every user with no portfolio minimums and no subscription, on April 22, 2026, stating that customers save up to 98% on spot fees versus Coinbase. That is the lowest published base fee among US-available venues.

The legal status is a common point of confusion. Binance.US operates as a separate US entity from the global Binance.com platform, which is not available to US customers. The trade-off for the near-zero fee is liquidity: Binance.US sits far below Coinbase and Kraken on 24-hour volume, which can widen effective costs through slippage on larger orders even when the headline fee is zero.

![Checkmark](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-header.png)Pros

- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Lowest published base fee among US venues (0% maker, 0.02% taker).
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)No portfolio minimum or subscription required.
- ![Check](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/pros-check.png)Separate US-licensed entity, distinct from Binance.com.



![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-header.png)Cons

- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Thinnest liquidity in the ranked set; slippage can raise effective cost on large orders.
- ![Cross](https://coinlaw.io/wp-content/themes/hodl-this-design/assets/img/cons-cross.png)Crypto holdings carry no FDIC or SIPC insurance.





### Is Binance legal in the US?

Binance.US is a US-licensed entity that accepts US customers and operates separately from Binance.com. The global Binance.com platform is not available to US customers; Binance.US is the distinct US entity, per the company’s April 22, 2026 announcement. US residents trade on Binance.US, not Binance.com. As with every US venue here, crypto on the platform is not FDIC- or SIPC-insured.

Five exchanges, five strengths. A few more US-available venues round out the comparison set.

## Other US-Available Exchanges

Beyond the top five, two more US-available venues show up in the same CoinGecko snapshot. Bitstamp by Robinhood holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 7 with a trust score of 9, on about **1,607 BTC** of 24-hour volume at the June 21, 2026 snapshot, a mid-tier US liquidity profile. Robinhood Crypto also serves US retail through the broader Robinhood app, primarily as an on-ramp rather than a deep order-book venue, and its growth mirrors the broader US [retail investing data](https://coinlaw.io/retail-investing-statistics/) that shows newer holders favoring app-first platforms.

These venues widen the field for US traders, but the five ranked above lead on the combination of liquidity, fee transparency and documented US licensing that the scoring criteria reward. For traders weighing a non-custodial alternative to all of these centralized venues, the trade-offs differ sharply: a decentralized exchange never custodies funds, removing the FDIC-insurance question entirely while shifting full self-custody responsibility onto the holder.

With the field set, the question becomes which venue fits which job.

## Best US Exchange by Use Case

Binance.US lists a 0% maker fee on all pairs, the lowest published base maker fee in this set, while Coinbase holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 1, the top rank among these US venues, so the four scored criteria split the field rather than crowning one overall winner. Each verdict below names the criterion it leads and the evidence behind it.

- **Best for lowest fees:** Binance.US scores highest on the fee criterion. Its 0% maker and 0.02% taker schedule applies to all pairs and all users with no minimum, announced April 22, 2026. The trade-off is the thinnest liquidity in the set.
- **Best for deepest liquidity:** Coinbase scores highest on the volume-and-liquidity criterion. It holds CoinGecko trust-score rank 1 and a trust score of 10 at the June 21, 2026 snapshot, backed by the largest disclosed trading volume in its SEC 10-K.
- **Best for active and pro traders:** Kraken scores highest for high-volume accounts. Its maker fee falls to 0.00% at $10 million in 30-day volume, from a 0.25% entry rate, rewarding traders whose throughput clears the upper tiers.
- **Best for stablecoin swaps:** Gemini scores highest on stablecoin cost. Listed stablecoin pairs trade at 0.00% maker and 0.00% taker on its ActiveTrader schedule, the cheapest stablecoin lane among these venues.

## Which US crypto exchange has the lowest fees?

Binance.US charges 0% maker and 0.02% taker on all pairs for all users with no portfolio minimum, announced April 22, 2026. Kraken reaches 0.00% maker only at $10 million in 30-day volume, and Gemini reaches 0.000% maker only at $250 million in combined 30-day volume, so for most retail accounts Binance.US is cheaper at entry, though its thinner liquidity can raise effective costs on large orders.

Those verdicts come from one scoring framework. Here is exactly how it works.

## How We Ranked These

Each exchange was scored against four weighted criteria, drawn from SEC filings, the live CoinGecko snapshot, and official maker and taker fee schedules, with US licensing carried as a scored dimension rather than a footnote the way most roundups treat it.

- **Trading volume and liquidity (30%):** CoinGecko 24h spot volume and trust-score rank, plus Coinbase’s disclosed 10-K trading volume.
- **Fee competitiveness (25%):** Official maker/taker base fees and tier glide paths from each venue’s published schedule.
- **[US licensing and regulatory posture](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-regulations-in-the-united-states-statistics/) (25%):** NYDFS BitLicense or limited-purpose trust-charter status, state money-transmission licenses, and SEC filings.
- **Supported assets and security (20%):** CoinGecko trust score and public custody and insurance disclosures.

The candidate pool was US-available centralized exchanges ranked by CoinGecko trust score, narrowed to venues that accept US customers, hold named US licensing, and rank inside the top-25. Two venues were considered and excluded: the global Binance.com platform, because it is not available to US customers (only Binance.US qualifies), and KuCoin and MEXC, because they were restricted or not fully licensed for US retail at the snapshot.

> **Why it matters:** The base-fee spread across US venues runs from Binance.US at **0%** maker to Gemini at **0.600%** maker, a gap wide enough to outweigh small differences in supported assets. Kraken sits between them at a 0.25% entry maker fee that falls to 0.00% at $10 million in 30-day volume. For most retail accounts, the entry rate is the rate that applies.

The US-licensing criterion is where the scoring departs from typical roundups. New York’s framework, codified at 23 NYCRR Part 200, took effect on August 8, 2015, and lets a firm either obtain a BitLicense or proceed via an NYDFS-approved limited-purpose trust charter; fewer than 50 BitLicenses have been issued since the framework launched. Scoring this distinction rewards venues with documented, examinable US authorization.

The pattern CoinLaw has tracked across 18 regulatory events holds here too: licensing frameworks follow market crises, and the venues that secured early New York authorization now carry a measurable trust advantage. The same logic shapes the [global crypto exchange licensing requirements](https://coinlaw.io/crypto-exchange-licensing-requirements-worldwide/) that determine which venues can serve which markets.

Per-item scoring rationale, each citing the evidence above:

ExchangeVolume/liquidity (30%)Fees (25%)US licensing (25%)Assets/security (20%)Weighted totalCoinbase9.67.09.09.58.9Kraken8.28.58.09.58.5Gemini5.56.09.58.07.1Crypto.com7.57.56.58.57.5Binance.US4.09.87.58.07.0Source: CoinGecko, Coinbase 10-K, Kraken, Gemini, Binance.US fee schedules

 US Exchanges by CoinLaw Weighted Score (score, 0 to 10) EXCHANGE SCORECARD · Source: CoinLaw weighted scorecard (CoinGecko, Coinbase 10-K, fee schedules)    EXCHANGE SCORECARD · COINLAW ANALYSIS US Exchanges by CoinLaw Weighted Score (score, 0 to 10)    CoinLaw scorecard · 2026          10 7.5 5 2.5 0   8.9 Coinbase  8.5 Kraken  7.5 Crypto.com  7.1 Gemini  7.0 Binance.US    SOURCE CoinLaw weighted scorecard (CoinGecko, Coinbase 10-K, fee schedules)      Coinbase scores highest overall on liquidity and documented volume; Binance.US leads on fees alone.

## Is My Crypto Safe on a US Exchange?

Crypto held on a US exchange is not protected by deposit insurance. Coinbase holds US customers’ cash at FDIC-insured depository institutions under state money-transmitter laws, per its 10-K, which reports **$404 billion** in assets on the platform. That FDIC coverage applies to the US-dollar cash, not the digital assets: there is no FDIC or SIPC coverage on the crypto itself, so a platform failure or an account compromise is an uninsured loss that a bank deposit would not be.

State and federal oversight reduces some risk but does not replace insurance. NYDFS authorization under 23 NYCRR Part 200 comes as either a BitLicense or a limited-purpose trust charter, a licensing framework that regulates virtual-currency business conduct and custody. That licensing is conduct and custody oversight, not deposit insurance. A venue’s licensing posture is a meaningful trust signal and a scored criterion above, yet the safest posture still leaves custody and account-takeover risk with the holder.

Account-takeover and exchange-level losses are tracked in the [cryptocurrency security and fraud data](https://coinlaw.io/cryptocurrency-security-fraud-statistics/), which shows why custody risk is the dimension most US holders underweight. Many US traders address that gap by moving long-term holdings off exchanges, a directional shift CoinLaw’s wallet and exchange coverage has documented after each major exchange failure.

## What Is the Best Crypto Exchange in the USA?

Coinbase reported $1,162 billion in 2024 trading volume and 8.4 million monthly transacting users in its SEC 10-K, the largest disclosed volume in the set. It also holds CoinGecko trust-score rank **1**, the top rank among these US venues. The best venue for a given trader depends on whether fees, liquidity or licensing matters most.

## Is Crypto FDIC-Insured on a US Exchange?

Zero US exchanges carry FDIC or SIPC insurance on crypto. Coinbase holds US customers’ cash at FDIC-insured banks under state money-transmitter laws, per its 10-K, which reports **$404 billion** in assets on the platform. That FDIC coverage reaches only the US-dollar cash, not the crypto itself, so the assets sit with the holder’s custody and account-takeover risk, which no insurer backstops.

## Conclusion

Coinbase reported **$1,162 billion** in 2024 trading volume in its SEC 10-K, and Binance.US announced a **0%** maker fee on all pairs. Those figures mark the two poles of the US exchange market: deepest liquidity on one end, lowest cost on the other. The five ranked venues split cleanly across the four scored criteria, and no single exchange wins every dimension, so the use-case verdicts matter more than an overall crown. Traders comparing accounts gain most from reading the fee schedule and licensing posture side by side rather than chasing a headline rank.

The structural change worth tracking this year is regulatory. As US licensing frameworks mature and more venues secure documented NYDFS authorization, the licensing dimension will keep separating the field, even as fees compress toward zero.

Definition of Staking. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Staking**Staking is the process of locking cryptocurrency in a proof-of-stake network to help validate transactions and earn rewards, replacing energy-intensive mining.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/staking/)

Definition of Stablecoin. Link to full glossary entry follows the description.**Stablecoin**A stablecoin is a cryptocurrency tied to a reserve asset like the US dollar, designed to maintain a stable value for trading, payments, and transfers.

[Read more](https://coinlaw.io/glossary/stablecoin/)