CoinMarketCap now supports on-chain trading via DEX Mode, but it is still neither an exchange nor a wallet, and cannot access or hold your funds.
CoinMarketCap is one of the most visited websites in crypto. Hundreds of millions of people each month rely on it for prices, market caps, volumes, rankings, and the broader market data that helps them make sense of an industry that never stops moving.
For most of CMC's history, the answer to "Can I trade crypto on CoinMarketCap?" was a simple “no.” That's recently changed, but only in a very specific way.
CoinMarketCap is still not an exchange, nor is it a crypto wallet. However, what it now allows you to do is connect your self-custody wallet and swap tokens via third-party decentralized exchanges (DEXs) directly from a coin's detail page, without ever handing over your funds.
Is CoinMarketCap a Crypto Exchange?
Can You Deposit or Withdraw Crypto on CoinMarketCap?
CoinMarketCap is neither a wallet nor an exchange. It does not and cannot hold, custody, or have any way to access user funds. There is no CMC balance to deposit assets into, and there is no CMC balance to withdraw from.
Even when you use the trading feature, your funds remain in your own self-custody wallet the entire time. CoinMarketCap cannot move, freeze, or access your tokens in any way.
Can You Make Money on CoinMarketCap?
When you use the trading feature, you can realize gains and losses on the trades you place. Those outcomes depend entirely on your own decisions, the tokens you choose, market conditions, slippage, and the risks inherent to on-chain trading.
Beware of Scammers Sharing CoinMarketCap Portfolios
Even with on-chain trading now available, one thing hasn't changed: A CoinMarketCap Portfolio is a watchlist only, not a brokerage account. Scammers regularly exploit this confusion.
A common scam pattern is sharing screenshots of CMC Portfolios that appear to show massive trading profits. Those portfolios are typically entirely fabricated. Users are able to manually input their holdings and prices, or they can sync the portfolio to compatible exchanges/wallets — which is still a manual process to connect. CMC has no way to verify, audit, or reflect any actual trading activity in these portfolios. The "profits" displayed are whatever the scammer typed in.
The scammer usually follows up the screenshot with a pitch: a "proven strategy," a paid signal group, a financial coaching package, discovery of lost or frozen funds, or a fake investment service. None of it is connected to real trading on CoinMarketCap, as CoinMarketCap Portfolios do not represent real trading. They are watchlists where users add tokens they want to follow, or tokens they are currently holding on multiple platforms and like to track the market conditions of on one platform.
Treat any claim of "I made millions on my CoinMarketCap portfolio" or “You have funds on your CoinMarketCap portfolio” as a scam. Do your own research, only trade through reputable platforms, and never send money to anyone using a CMC Portfolio screenshot as proof of returns. If it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.
CoinMarketCap Is Not an Investment Platform
A separate scam pattern involves people impersonating CoinMarketCap representatives and soliciting deposits for "investment" purposes. CMC is not an investment platform. It will never accept user funds for crypto purchases or investments, because, as covered above, CoinMarketCap cannot hold user funds.
A few details worth knowing that often pop up in these attempted scams:
- CoinMarketCap does not facilitate centralized trading or hold user balances whatsoever on its platform.
- CoinMarketCap operates globally in major cities worldwide and does not have centralized/main offices. For example, there are no addresses in Singapore associated with CoinMarketCap.
- Please be aware of imposters impersonating CoinMarketCap via social media. You can find CMC’s official social channels listed here.
- All official CoinMarketCap emails will be sent from the email domain @coinmarketcap.com, @account.coinmarketcap.com, or @coinmarketcap.zendesk.com. Always double-check email addresses.
- If you need assistance, please contact CoinMarketCap using its official request form or ask our AI chatbot for help. Please note that CoinMarketCap does not communicate with users or respond to inquiries on social media platforms or messaging apps such as WhatsApp or Discord.
Reports of these impersonation scams have been particularly common among users in Singapore, Africa, and the United Kingdom, but they appear in other regions too. If anyone claiming to represent CMC asks you to deposit funds, it's a scam.
Key Takeaways
- CoinMarketCap is neither a cryptocurrency exchange nor a wallet. The new DEX Mode feature lets you swap tokens on Solana and BSC directly from a coin's detail page, through your own self-custody wallet — but CMC cannot and does not hold your funds. There is nothing to deposit and nothing to withdraw when using CoinMarketCap, even when you trade.
- You cannot make money directly on CoinMarketCap. If you use the trading feature, you can realize gains or losses on trades you place, and you are solely responsible for those outcomes. Simply put, CoinMarketCap is not liable for any financial outcomes. Refer to CMC’s Disclaimer and Trading Terms & Conditions and Trading Risk Disclosure.
- CoinMarketCap Portfolios are watchlists, not real trading accounts. Treat any claims of "profits" from a CMC Portfolio screenshot as a scam.
UPDATE: This article was updated in May 2026 to reflect CoinMarketCap’s new trading features.
