Which one fits you — Binance or Coinbase?
Both brokers are EU-regulated and aim at retail investors, but their fee models, asset coverage and target audiences diverge sharply. Binance stands out with "Niedrigste Spot-Gebühren der Branche (0,1 % bzw. 0,075 %)" while Coinbase differentiates itself through "Einzige NASDAQ-gelistete Krypto-Börse (COIN)". Our rating: Binance 4.0/5, Coinbase 4.2/5 — but the better choice depends on your trading frequency, asset class and tax residency. The sections below break down where each broker wins.
When Binance is the better choice
Binance's edge shows up clearest where its strengths matter most: "Niedrigste Spot-Gebühren der Branche (0,1 % bzw. 0,075 %)" makes it the natural fit for investors who prioritise exactly that. Pair it with its rating of 4.0/5 and you have a broker that delivers when the use case lines up. The trade-off — "Nicht in den USA verfügbar (nur Binance.US)" — only bites if it touches your workflow. If it does not, Binance is the cleaner pick.
When Coinbase is the better choice
Coinbase pulls ahead where "Einzige NASDAQ-gelistete Krypto-Börse (COIN)" is decisive. With a rating of 4.2/5 it covers a different investor profile than Binance — the question is whether that profile is yours. Note the limitation "Standard-Gebühren 5x teurer als Pro/Advanced"; it does not affect every workflow, but where it does, plan around it. For everyone else, Coinbase delivers a sharper edge than the comparison fees alone suggest.
Tax handling in DE/AT/CH
For German residents both brokers withhold the Abgeltungssteuer (25% + Soli + church tax) automatically when they are registered as a German tax intermediary; if not, gains must be declared via Anlage KAP. Austrian investors need a "steuereinfacher" broker to avoid the manual E1kv form — check each broker's status. Swiss residents settle gains via the annual Steuererklärung regardless; only Verrechnungssteuer is withheld at source for CH-listed names. Compare exemption order (Freistellungsauftrag) limits and Steuerbescheinigung delivery timing before deciding.
Cost example: €5,000 portfolio, 12 trades/year
Take a realistic mid-sized portfolio: €5,000 invested, one trade per month over a year, plus a quarterly rebalance. On Binance the dominant cost driver is order commission plus any FX conversion if you buy US stocks. On Coinbase the model differs — depending on the listing venue and whether savings plans are free, your annual carry can land 30-70% below or above the alternative. The honest answer: run your own use-case through each broker's fee calculator before committing. The headline rates rarely tell the full story once spreads, FX and inactivity fees are stacked.
Bottom line
There is no universal winner between Binance (4.0/5) and Coinbase (4.2/5) — the right broker is the one whose strengths align with your three or four highest-priority use cases. If "Niedrigste Spot-Gebühren der Branche (0,1 % bzw. 0,075 %)" matches yours, Binance is the cleaner pick. If "Einzige NASDAQ-gelistete Krypto-Börse (COIN)" matches yours, Coinbase pulls ahead. Open both demo accounts before committing real capital; ten minutes in each interface tells you more than any review.