
Centralized crypto exchange spot volume fell to $679 billion in April 2026, marking its lowest monthly level since October 2023, according to CryptoQuant data cited by Wu Blockchain.
Summary
- CryptoQuant data shows centralized exchange spot volume fell to $679 billion in April 2026.
- Weak retail demand, lower search interest, and Bitcoin’s pullback reduced activity across crypto exchanges.
- Crypto.news reports show exchanges are leaning on derivatives, stablecoins, and services as spot trading slows.
The drop shows that traders are using spot markets less as the wider crypto market faces weaker demand, falling retail interest, and pressure from Bitcoin’s sharp pullback from its 2025 highs.
Crypto spot volume hits lowest level since 2023
CryptoQuant data showed that spot trading volume across centralized exchanges fell to $679 billion in April. The figure marked a sharp decline from the late-2025 market peak.
The report said the drop reflected weaker retail participation and lower demand. It also suggested that the market’s current problem is not only heavy selling, but a lack of buyers.
Perpetual futures volume also fell as speculative leverage left the market. That shift shows that traders have reduced risk across both spot and derivatives markets.
The data follows a wider slowdown across centralized exchanges. As previously reported by crypto.news, centralized exchange volume dropped about 48% from the October 2025 peak to $4.3 trillion in March 2026.
Retail interest falls across crypto markets
Crypto.news recently reported that global Google search interest in cryptocurrency fell to 26–30 out of 100. That is about 70 points below the August 2025 peak.
The fall in search interest points to weaker retail attention. It also shows that crypto prices and public interest are no longer moving together as closely as in past cycles.
Bitcoin has also traded under pressure. Crypto.news reported that Bitcoin fell below $70,000 on June 2 and traded near $69,200, about 45% below its October 2025 cycle high.
This weaker market setting has reduced trading activity. When prices fall and retail interest fades, spot volumes often drop because fewer users buy, sell, or rotate between assets.
Exchanges feel pressure from lower activity
Lower spot trading has already affected major exchange businesses. Crypto.news reported that Coinbase posted a $394.1 million Q1 loss as transaction revenue fell from a year earlier.
Coinbase said trading volume dropped to $202 billion from $401 billion in the same period last year. The company also said global crypto spot trading volume fell 44% during the quarter.
This shows how exposed exchanges remain to trading cycles. When spot volume drops, fee revenue can fall quickly, especially for platforms that rely heavily on transaction activity.
Some exchanges are now leaning more on derivatives, stablecoins, stock trading, and other services. These areas can help reduce dependence on spot crypto fees during slow markets.
Bitcoin selloff adds more market stress
The April volume drop also fits the latest market weakness. Crypto.news reported that Bitcoin and Ethereum faced a $1.89 billion options expiry on June 5 while prices traded near multi-month lows.
Bitcoin briefly approached $60,000 during the selloff. Traders also increased downside hedging as market sentiment weakened.
“Spot trading volume across centralized exchanges fell to $679 billion in April 2026,” CryptoQuant’s report said, according to Wu Blockchain.
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