Crypto trades happen on two very different kinds of venue: centralized exchanges (CEXs) and decentralized exchanges (DEXs). Knowing the difference helps you weigh convenience against control and risk.
Centralized exchanges
A CEX is a company that holds your funds and matches trades, much like a broker. They are easy to use and liquid, but you are trusting the company with custody — “not your keys, not your coins” is the well-worn warning.
Decentralized exchanges
A DEX lets you trade directly from your own wallet against smart contracts, keeping custody yourself. That removes company risk but adds smart-contract risk, complexity, and no support desk. We describe how each works in our reviews; a review is information, not a recommendation. See our affiliate disclosure.
Educational content, not financial advice. Crypto is volatile and you can lose money. Do your own research. Crypto Ruble Coins is a news and education publication — not an exchange, conversion, or off-ramp service.
Last updated 13 Jul 2026
The Crypto Ruble Coins editorial desk reports and edits human-written journalism on the money layer of crypto — CBDCs, stablecoins, and crypto priced in your currency. Independent. Not financial advice.