Kraken vs dYdX: CEX vs decentralized futures trading
Kraken is a regulated centralized exchange, dYdX is a decentralized onchain perpetuals protocol. The architecture difference shapes everything: custody, fees, product range, regulatory protection, and what happens when things go wrong.
dYdX runs on its own Cosmos-based L1 blockchain (dYdX Chain), with no component operated by a central company. Orders are matched by validators, settled onchain, and there are no gas fees on trades.
dYdX offers 180+ crypto perpetual markets and a maker rebate at the base tier. It does not offer spot trading, fiat on-ramps, CME contracts, or equity exposure.
Kraken offers 300+ crypto perpetual markets and is regulated in the US, EU, and elsewhere in the world.
dYdX is not available to US residents. dYdX explicitly prohibits US and Canadian users, whereas Kraken offers US traders CME-cleared micro futures via Kraken Derivatives US.
An introduction to Kraken vs dYdX
Kraken and dYdX are both perpetual futures platforms built on completely different foundations. With Kraken, a regulated company holds your assets, runs the matching engine, and is accountable to regulators in the US, EU, and beyond.
With dYdX, a decentralized network of validators runs the exchange onchain, your assets stay in your own wallet, and no single entity is in control. That is a deliberate design choice meaning the two platforms are not competing on the same terms, so which one fits you depends on how you want to trade and what level of counterparty risk you are comfortable with in either direction.
What is dYdX?
dYdX is a decentralized exchange built for perpetual futures trading. Unlike centralized platforms, it runs entirely onchain on its own Cosmos SDK-based blockchain called dYdX Chain, launched in November 2023. Users connect via a Web3 wallet, never deposit funds to a company, and no KYC is required. Every fill settles onchain, maintained by a decentralized network of validators.
dYdX was the dominant decentralized perps protocol until Hyperliquid emerged and surpassed it. For a full CEX vs DEX comparison with broader market context, read our Kraken vs Hyperliquid guide.
dYdX vs Hyperliquid: which DEX to consider
Traders evaluating dYdX often also consider Hyperliquid. Both are non-custodial perp DEXs with no KYC and no gas fees on trades. The practical difference is liquidity, with Hyperliquid processing close to 30 times more daily volume than dYdX, and holding over 100 times more open interest. Hyperliquid also offers equity and commodity perps via HIP-3, whereas dYdX is crypto-only.
On fees, dYdX's maker rebate (-1.1 bps) is attractive for high-frequency liquidity providers, while Hyperliquid's base taker fee (0.045%) is slightly higher than dYdX's (0.03%) but this can be reduced via HYPE staking.

Futures product comparison
Below is a comparison table of Kraken and dYdX's futures offerings.
Kraken | dYdX | |
|---|---|---|
Custody | Custodial (assets held by Kraken) | Non-custodial (self-custody via Web3 wallet) |
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+ | 180+ (crypto only) |
Max leverage | Up to 50x (varies by region and asset) | Up to 20x on most markets |
Margin modes | Cross, isolated | Cross, isolated |
Gas fees on trades | None | None |
Spot trading | Yes | No |
CME contracts | Yes (US only) | No |
xStocks perps | Yes (non-US) | No |
TradFi futures | Yes | No |
Fiat on-ramp | Yes | No |
US access | Yes | No. Explicitly prohibited under Terms of Use |
Canada access | Yes | No. Explicitly prohibited under Terms of Use |
Futures fees comparison
dYdX's base tier fees are -1.1 basis points for makers (a rebate) and 3 basis points (0.03%) for takers, scaling lower with higher 30-day trading volume. There are no gas fees on order placement, cancellation, or fills. Fee parameters are controlled by governance and can be adjusted by DYDX token holders.
Kraken uses a maker-taker model with volume-based discounts on 30-day trading volume. Fees are calculated as a percentage of the total notional value of the matched trade, and for clients whose volume exceeds $100,000,000, the maker fees drop to 0% and can turn into rebates at the highest tiers.
The total cost of carrying a position includes more than the trading fee. Funding rate payments accumulate over the life of the position, and liquidation fees apply if the exchange engine closes your position. Both platforms publish live funding rates. dYdX funding rates are paid continuously based on the difference between the perpetual price and the spot index price.
Which platform works out cheaper depends on your trading volume, how long you hold positions, and which funding rate environment you are operating in. Beyond fees, factors like customer support, regulatory protection, fiat access, and platform track record all feed into the total picture. Kraken offers all of those, however dYdX does not.

CEX vs DEX: the trade-offs
Trading on Kraken means a regulated company holds your assets and runs the matching engine. You get regulatory protection, customer support, fiat on-ramps, and a product range that includes spot, staking, CME contracts, and xStocks perps. There is no smart contract or validator risk, and your assets are segregated under formal custody rules.
The trade-off is counterparty exposure to Kraken itself. If the platform faced insolvency, client asset segregation rules provide some protection but do not eliminate the risk entirely. In addition, KYC is mandatory.
Trading on dYdX means your assets stay in your own wallet and a validator network runs the exchange onchain. There is no KYC at the protocol level, no counterparty risk from exchange insolvency, and no single entity that can freeze your funds.
The trade-off is that there is also no customer support, no recourse if funds are lost through user error, and liquidity depth is thinner than on major CEXs, which can widen spreads on larger positions. The regulatory status of DEX users, particularly in the US and Canada where dYdX explicitly prohibits access, is an open question under evolving law. This developing landscape and ever-changing environment may not suit all traders.
Neither set of trade-offs is objectively better, they suit different traders with different priorities.
Who should use Kraken vs dYdX?
Kraken is the better fit if you need regulatory protection, want CME contracts or xStocks perps, need fiat access, are based in the US or EU, or want customer support when things go wrong.
dYdX is a strong fit if you prioritize self-custody, are comfortable managing a Web3 wallet and bridge flows, want a maker rebate structure, and understand the validator and smart contract risks involved.
dYdX is a perps-only exchange with no spot trading, no fiat access, and a narrower product range. In contrast, Kraken also offers xStocks perps, TradFi futures, fiat support, and more.
Get started trading futures on Kraken
Kraken Pro offers 300+ perpetual futures, CME micro contracts, xStocks perps (for traders outside the US), and TradFi futures.
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.