Kraken vs Hyperliquid: CEX vs DEX for futures trading
Kraken is a regulated centralized exchange, Hyperliquid is a decentralized onchain perpetuals protocol. The architecture difference determines everything: custody, fees, regulatory protection, and what happens if something goes wrong.
Kraken uses a maker-taker fee model where costs decrease as your volume grows. Active traders unlock meaningfully lower rates the more they trade. Hyperliquid's base tier fees are 0.045% taker and 0.015% maker with no gas fees, which are lower at entry level, but Kraken's volume-based discounts make it increasingly competitive for traders operating at scale.
Hyperliquid holds around 70% of onchain perpetual futures volume and processed over $619 billion in Q1 2026, making it the dominant DEX in its category.
Kraken offers products Hyperliquid does not: CME micro contracts for US traders, xStocks perps (SPYx, NVDAx, TSLAx) for traders in other regions, fiat on-ramps, and customer support.
Hyperliquid is not available to US users. For US traders, Kraken offers a regulated and compliant path to trading both perpetual futures and traditional fixed term CME futures contracts.
An introduction to Kraken vs Hyperliquid
Kraken and Hyperliquid both offer perpetual futures, but that is where the similarity ends. Kraken is a regulated centralized exchange. You custody assets with Kraken, trade through their matching engine, benefit from regulatory protection, industry-leading security, award-winning customer support, and fiat access in return.
Hyperliquid is a decentralized onchain order book running on its own L1 blockchain. You keep custody of your assets and trade directly onchain, but in turn you give up some of those protections.
One important fact on access: Hyperliquid's Terms of Use explicitly prohibit US residents and Ontario, Canada residents from using the interface. Kraken is available in both. For US traders specifically, Kraken Derivatives US is a CFTC-registered Futures Commission Merchant offering CME-cleared micro contracts.
Beyond the US, Kraken's regulated presence across the EU, UK, Australia, and Canada means traders in those regions get formal regulatory protection that a DEX cannot offer regardless of where they are located.
For everyone else, this article lays out what each trade-off actually means in practice.
What is Hyperliquid?
Hyperliquid launched in 2023 and has since become the largest decentralized perpetual futures exchange by volume. It runs on its own L1 blockchain, HyperCore, which is purpose-built for high-speed order matching, with an Ethereum-compatible HyperEVM layer for smart contracts and applications alongside it.
By Q1 2026, Hyperliquid had processed over $619 billion in trading volume for the quarter, commanding roughly 70% of onchain perpetual futures activity and a TVL of approximately $4.2 billion. The protocol raised no venture capital and it distributed 31% of its HYPE token supply directly to users via airdrop in November 2024.
However, the March 2025 JELLYJELLY incident is worth noting. A large leveraged position on a low-liquidity token created a near-liquidation event on the platform. Validators intervened and voted to delist the market to resolve it, which drew criticism about how decentralized the protocol truly is. The team responded with governance updates and tighter risk parameters. This is a useful real world example of what "decentralization" means when things go wrong.

Futures product comparison
The table below compares Kraken vs Hyperliquid on a range of elements key to futures trading.
Kraken | Hyperliquid | |
|---|---|---|
Custody | Custodial (assets held by Kraken) | Non-custodial (self-custody) |
KYC required | Yes | No (at protocol level) |
Regulation | MiCA (EU), CFTC/NFA (US via Kraken Derivatives US) | No license held in major jurisdictions |
Perpetual markets | 300+ | 100+ core markets (validator-operated); significantly more including HIP-3 community-deployed markets |
Max leverage (BTC) | Up to 50x | Up to 40x (varies by asset, 3x to 40x range) |
Margin modes | Cross, isolated | Cross, isolated, portfolio |
Funding rate settlement | Every 8 hours in the US, every hour in other regions | Every 8 hours (paid hourly in 1/8 increments) |
Gas fees on trades | None | None |
CME micro contracts | Yes (US only) | No |
xStocks perps | Yes (non-US regions) | No |
TradFi futures | Yes | Yes |
Fiat on-ramp | Yes | No |
US access | Yes | No. The Interface is not available to US residents under Hyperliquid's Terms of Use (Section 1.5) |
Since October 2025, Hyperliquid's HIP-3 upgrade has allowed third-party developers to permissionlessly launch new perpetual markets on the platform's infrastructure, adding 24/7 perps on equities (NVDA, TSLA), commodities (gold, silver), and indices (S&P 500, Nasdaq) alongside the core crypto markets.
Futures fees comparison
Hyperliquid's perp fee tiers, confirmed from the official docs, run from 0.045% taker / 0.015% maker at the base tier (under $5M 14-day volume) down to 0.024% taker / 0.000% maker at Tier 6 (over $7B). Staking HYPE adds a further discount on top, up to 40% at Diamond tier, requiring 500,000 HYPE staked. There are no gas fees on order placement, cancellation, or fills. The withdrawal fee is a flat $1 USDC to Arbitrum.
Alternatively, Kraken uses a maker-taker fee model with volume-based discounts on 30-day trading volume. Current fee schedules should be verified against the live Kraken futures fee page before publishing.
At the base tier, Hyperliquid is cheaper. The gap narrows for high-volume traders on both platforms. That said, total cost of carry includes more than just the maker/taker fee; funding rates, spread, and any liquidation fees all contribute. Both platforms publish funding rates in real time so it's worth checking before you trade.
Kraken's fee structure also comes with something Hyperliquid cannot offer: a regulated account with fiat on-ramps, customer support, and no requirement to manage your own wallet or bridge funds. For traders who factor operational cost and platform risk into their total cost of trading, that distinction matters.

CEX vs DEX: the real trade-offs
This is the section that actually matters for most traders comparing these two platforms.
What a CEX like Kraken gives you: Regulatory protection and recourse if something goes wrong. Customer support. Fiat on-ramps and off-ramps. A broader product range including spot, staking, payments, and margin. No smart contract risk. KYC compliance that satisfies regulatory requirements in multiple jurisdictions. Client asset segregation rules that govern how your funds are held.
What a DEX like Hyperliquid gives you: Self-custody, your assets are in your wallet, not on an exchange's balance sheet. No KYC, which can matter for privacy-conscious traders. Typically lower fees at the base tier. Censorship resistance in principle. No counterparty risk from exchange insolvency. There is no Hyperliquid balance sheet to fail.
CEX risks: If Kraken were to face insolvency, client assets could be at risk depending on the jurisdiction and legal structure, though segregation rules provide some protection. KYC requirements may be a barrier for some users.
DEX risks: Smart contract vulnerabilities can result in permanent loss of funds with no recourse. The JELLYJELLY incident showed that validator intervention is possible during a crisis, raising questions about decentralization in practice. There is no customer support and no insurance fund of the kind regulated exchanges such as Kraken are required to maintain. US users cannot legally access Hyperliquid's interface at all. This is not a grey area, section 1.5 of Hyperliquid's Terms of Use explicitly prohibits US residents and US citizens regardless of location.
"No counterparty risk" on a DEX is only fully true if the smart contracts are sound and behave as documented. The JELLYJELLY episode is a reminder that onchain does not automatically mean trustless when validators hold meaningful power.
Who should use Kraken vs Hyperliquid?
Kraken fits you better if: you're based in the US (Hyperliquid is not available to you), you need regulatory protection, you want access to CME micro contracts or xStocks perps, you need fiat on-ramps, access to additional products, or you want customer support when things go wrong.
Hyperliquid fits you better if: you prioritize self-custody, you're comfortable managing your own wallet and bridge flows, you want lower fees without volume requirements, and you understand and accept the smart contract risks involved.
Many active traders use both: CEX for regulated products and fiat access, DEX for cost efficiency and self-custody on pure crypto positions.
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Disclaimer
The educational material on this page is for information only and does not constitute an offer to trade futures. Kraken Futures is provided by a different licensed Kraken entity depending on where you live. Derivatives are complex instruments that carry a high risk of rapid losses due to leverage. You should not risk money you cannot afford to lose. Tax treatment depends on your individual circumstances and may change. Geographic restrictions may apply and can change without notice. Kraken products and services may not be covered by investor-compensation or deposit-protection schemes. Nothing on this page is investment, legal or tax advice. Access is subject to eligibility, local regulation and the terms of service for the legal entity you face.
xStocks Perps are offered to eligible Kraken customers via Payward Digital Solutions Ltd. ("PDSL"), a company licensed to conduct digital asset business by the Bermuda Monetary Authority. Neither this product nor Stocks are or will be registered with any local securities regulators. Trading derivatives involves a high level of risk and may not be suitable for all investors. You may lose more than your initial investment. This is not investment advice. Not available in the US and other geographic restrictions apply. For the full terms and conditions, please refer to Kraken's Terms of Service.