Centralized exchange spot trading volumes have declined every month since October 2025, with February 2026 data from CryptoRank showing the lowest aggregate figures recorded over the past twelve months, as activity across every major platform continues to pull back from last year’s peak.
October 2025 was the high point. Combined CEX spot volume across Binance, Bybit, OKX, Gate, Bitget, Coinbase, and other exchanges reached approximately $2,100 billion that month, driven by a period of elevated market activity and price momentum that pulled significant retail and institutional participation onto centralized platforms.
The decline since then has been consistent and broad. November pulled back to roughly $1,550 billion. December dropped further. January 2026 came in around $1,100 billion, and February 2026, still in progress at the time of the data snapshot on February 27th, is tracking toward approximately $900 billion at current pace. That represents a contraction of more than 55% from the October peak across just five months.
No single exchange has been immune. Binance, which accounts for the largest share of volume in every month on the chart, has seen its absolute contribution shrink proportionally alongside the overall market. The “Others” category, which captured a significant slice of volume during the October peak, has compressed most visibly in the most recent months.
Five consecutive months of falling spot volume on centralized exchanges is a meaningful data point, though its interpretation depends on what is driving it. Sustained price declines reduce the dollar value of trades even when transaction counts remain stable. Reduced retail participation during periods of market weakness compresses volume further. Migration of activity toward decentralized exchanges, perpetual futures markets, or newer venues not captured in the dataset could also account for some of the shift.
The February 2025 starting point on the chart is worth noting. Volume that month sat around $1,550 billion, which means the current February 2026 reading is tracking below where the market was a full year ago, at a point before the October rally materially elevated the baseline. That comparison puts the current contraction in slightly sharper relief.
The five-month decline lands against a backdrop of broader market uncertainty, with Bitcoin trading in the mid-$60,000s and sentiment cautious ahead of the March 1st Clarity Act deadline. Whether volume stabilizes or continues lower in March will depend in part on how that legislative catalyst resolves and whether price action responds in a way that draws retail participants back to centralized platforms.
For now, the CryptoRank data captures an industry that moved a great deal of capital in October and has been trading progressively less ever since.
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