TLDR
- Coinbase launched regulated crypto futures in 26 European countries on Monday
- Products include BTC and SOL futures, plus the Mag7 + Crypto Equity Index Futures contract
- Two contract types offered: perpetual-style (5-year expiry) and dated monthly/quarterly contracts
- Leverage up to 10x on select crypto and equity index products; fees from 0.02% per contract
- Launch comes weeks after ESMA warned perpetual derivatives may fall under CFD rules
Coinbase launched regulated crypto futures across Europe on Monday, rolling out access to Coinbase Advanced users in 26 countries including Germany, France, and the Netherlands.
JUST IN: Coinbase launches regulated crypto futures in Europe, available to Coinbase Advanced users in 26 countries. pic.twitter.com/7W596pujHR
— SwanDesk (@SwanDesk) March 9, 2026
The products are offered through Coinbase’s MiFID entity, giving the launch a regulated footing under European financial law.
The lineup covers crypto futures tied to Bitcoin and Solana, as well as a hybrid product called the Mag7 + Crypto Equity Index Futures. That contract bundles exposure to the Magnificent Seven stocks — Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Amazon, Nvidia, Meta, and Tesla — with crypto-linked equities and BlackRock iShares ETFs tied to BTC and ETH.
It’s a product that tries to be everything at once, and that’s exactly the point.
Coinbase is offering two types of cash-settled futures. The first are perpetual-style contracts with five-year expiries and an hourly funding mechanism, settled once per day. The second are dated contracts with specific monthly or quarterly expiration dates, marked to market daily based on official settlement prices.
Traders can access up to 10x leverage on select crypto contracts and equity indices. Other products come with up to 5x leverage. Fees start at 0.02% per contract.
ESMA Warning Casts a Shadow
The launch lands roughly two weeks after the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) put out a warning on Feb. 24 that many perpetual futures products likely fall under existing rules for contracts for difference (CFDs).
Under CFD rules, products face leverage caps, mandatory risk warnings, margin close-out requirements, negative balance protection, and a ban on certain monetary benefits.
ESMA also told firms to manage conflicts of interest tied to these products. That warning applies broadly across the industry, not just to Coinbase.
Coinbase has not publicly addressed how its products relate to ESMA’s CFD classification concerns.
Other regulated perpetual futures in Europe have been launched by One Trading, Kraken, Backpack, and Gemini.
“Exchange for Everything” Push
Coinbase described the European derivatives rollout as a “major step” in its goal to build an “exchange for everything,” where users can access all major global assets in one place.
“We are looking to expand beyond crypto, all within the trusted Coinbase app,” the company said in its announcement.
On Friday, Coinbase also expanded access to its decentralized exchange trading platform to 84 countries, a separate move that shows the company pushing on multiple fronts at once.
COIN stock fluctuated between small gains and losses in Monday morning trading, up 0.84% at the time of writing.





