The crypto derivatives market saw around $86 trillion in total volume in 2025, in a year that saw institutional adoption and unprecedented stress testing. Derivatives CoinGlass research shows that derivatives have a daily average transaction volume of nearly $265 billion, being the largest sector for price discovery.
The research stated that 2025 is the year of DATs (Depth of Activated Transactions). DAT businesses’ Bitcoin holdings climbed from 600,000 BTC at the start of the year to 1.05 million BTC by November, accounting for nearly 5% of the total Bitcoin supply.
The overall trading volume in the crypto derivatives market reached around $85.7 trillion this year, with a daily average of $264.5 billion. Global open positions in crypto derivatives dipped to their lowest level of the year in the first quarter, about $87 billion, due to a reduction in leverage, before swiftly climbing in the middle of the year to a new high of $235.9 billion on October 7.
Binance continued to dominate with $25.09 trillion or 29.3% of the global volume. A strong second tier — including OKX, Bybit, and Bitget — brought the combined market share of the four largest exchanges to just above 62.3%. The market’s structure has fundamentally changed, from a retail-driven, high-leverage model to one dominated by institutional hedging, basis trading, and ETF flows.
Also, the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) further cemented its position ahead of Binance in Bitcoin futures open interest since early 2024. But that concentration creates problems. About 97% of trading occurs on unregulated cryptocurrency exchanges, raising transparency and security concerns. Large liquidations, such as those in October 2025, underscore the market’s inherent volatility.
Bitcoin and Ethereum continue to be the best-selling assets in crypto derivatives. BTC dominates futures volumes, while ETH is riding a wave of growing interest in staking-related products, such as ETFs.
In Europe, Ethereum staking deposits increased by 28% in 2025. Speculative altcoins do not fall behind. Platforms such as dYdX predict $3.48 trillion in volume by 2025, driven by perpetual contracts.
These products, which account for 70% of total volume, attract both institutional and individual traders. For 2026, estimates are mixed. Regulated derivative products are projected to expand, but correction concerns persist. Increased regulation may also transform the landscape, with varying effects depending on the cryptocurrency.
The emergence of cryptocurrency derivatives in 2025 signals a watershed moment. Between financial innovation and systemic risk, the market must strike a balance. The dominance of Binance and CME, together with asset volatility, poses an important question: are we seeing the sector mature or a bubble about to burst?
