International traders, meaning anyone outside the United States, have a wider menu of crypto exchanges than US residents do. Most of the largest venues build their product roadmap around this audience: perpetual futures, copy trading, launchpads, multi-collateral margin, and high-leverage derivatives that are restricted or simply unavailable to US customers.
The trade-off is that these platforms operate offshore rather than under US state-by-state registration. So, the decision comes down to product mix, fee schedule, regional support, and how seriously each venue treats security and reserve transparency.
The short answer up front: for raw liquidity and brand reach, Bybit and OKX lead the international perpetuals market. For the largest copy trading roster and the lowest copy entry, Bitget is the volume leader.
BloFin is the standout among the smaller crypto-native venues for native multi-collateral futures in one account, paired with deep copy-trading controls and risk-adjusted analytics. For the widest altcoin selection, MEXC wins, and for the longest regulated track record, Kraken does. There is no single best exchange, only the best fit for a given workflow and jurisdiction.
This guide compares seven exchanges that serve non-US traders well in 2026. Every fee and product figure below was taken from each platform’s own fee schedule or help center and verified in June 2026, not from third-party aggregators.
Each platform is assessed on the four things an international trader actually decides on:
Where a platform clearly wins a category, it is named. Where it does not, it is not. Every exchange below currently serves international (non-US) users, with the partial exception of Kraken and OKX, which serve both US and international clients. Regional access varies, so readers should confirm availability for their own jurisdiction before signing up.
| Exchange | Spot taker (base) | Futures taker (base) | Copy trading | Where it leads |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bybit | 0.1000% | 0.0550% | Yes (Classic, 100 USDT min) | Liquidity, brand reach |
| OKX | 0.1000% | 0.0500% | Yes | Wide product menu, on-chain wallet |
| Bitget | 0.1000% | 0.0600% | Yes (Smart Copy, 50 USDT min) | Largest copy roster |
| BloFin | 0.1000% | 0.0600% | Yes (100 USDT min) | Multi-margin futures, risk-adjusted copy analytics |
| MEXC | 0.0000% | 0.0000% to 0.1000% | Limited | Most altcoin listings have the lowest spot fees |
| KuCoin | 0.1000% | 0.0600% | Yes | Listing speed, lending markets |
| Kraken | 0.40% (Pro, base) | 0.0500% | No native copy trading | Long track record, regulatory standing |
Fees and minimums verified against each platform’s own fee page or help center in June 2026. Base tier means the entry-level (non-VIP) rate.
One omission is deliberate. Binance is the largest international venue by volume, with 0.02% maker and 0.05% taker base futures fees and native copy trading from a 10 USDT portfolio minimum.
It is not ranked here because its regional availability shifts more than any other major exchange. Several jurisdictions have restricted or routed through local entities. That makes a single international recommendation unreliable. For traders in supported regions, it is the benchmark against which to compare the seven venues below.
Bybit is one of the highest-volume derivatives venues in crypto, with spot and copy trading built on top of a futures-first engine. Its Copy Trading Classic product lets followers mirror a Master Trader with a minimum of 100 USDT. Besides, Bybit confirms that figure in its help center, though individual Master Traders can require more.
Followers choose between Smart Copy Mode, where position sizing follows a fixed ratio of the lead’s and leverage syncs to the lead, and Advanced Copy Mode, where the follower sets a fixed margin per order and their own leverage.
The copier-side risk controls are the most granular in this group: a stop-loss and take-profit ratio per order, a maximum position margin per contract, a daily position limit, and a customizable slippage cap (default 0.5% to 1.5% by pair) that skips a copy rather than chasing a moved price.
The profit share paid to a Master Trader is tiered by Bybit’s ranking: 10%, rising to 15% for gold-ranked leads. Copy trading covers USDT perpetuals only, with no crypto spot copy.
Bybit’s first VIP tier opens at a 100,000 USDT asset balance or a 30-day volume threshold, and its monthly Merkle-tree proof of reserves has been audited by Hacken since 2024.
That audit carries extra weight here: Bybit absorbed a roughly $1.5 billion ETH theft in February 2025, attributed by US authorities to North Korea’s Lazarus Group, replenished reserves, and kept withdrawals open throughout.
OKX pairs a multi-product exchange with a self-custody Web3 wallet. Spot, perpetual futures, options, structured earn, and on-chain trading all live in the same app. Its base futures taker fee of 0.0500% is at the low end of the crypto-native group. Moreover, its spot maker fee of 0.0800% is slightly below the standard 0.1000% most peers charge.
Copy trading covers spot and futures and is priced per order rather than per trader. The minimum is 10 USDT per copied order, with the total allocation set by the copier. Lead traders earn a profit share that scales with their level, typically around 10%.
The first VIP tier opens at a 100,000 USDT asset balance or a 30-day volume threshold, with spot rates of 0.0675% maker and 0.080% taker at that tier. One product note for derivatives traders: OKX delisted its USDC-margined BTC and ETH perpetuals in December 2025, so its derivatives book now runs on USDT and coin margin. The exchange publishes a monthly proof of reserves with per-asset ratios and an open-source verification tool.
Bitget did more than most to turn copy trading into a mainstream crypto product. Its Smart Copy feature hosts a large roster of public lead traders and a deep follower pool, with a published leaderboard showing ROI, win rate, drawdown, and follower count.
The minimum to allocate to a Smart Copy is 50 USDT, confirmed in Bitget’s own support guide. Spot fees sit at the standard 0.1000% line, and base futures fees are 0.0200% maker and 0.0600% taker, the same bracket as BloFin rather than the cheapest cluster.
The profit share paid to the lead is tiered by trader rank on futures, from 10% up to 20% at the top class, while spot copy caps the share at 10%. Bitget’s first VIP tier opens at a 30,000 USDT daily asset balance. That’s a lower bar than BloFin’s 50,000 USDT, though the fee cut at that tier is smaller: the futures taker stays at 0.0600%. The exchange publishes a monthly Merkle-tree proof of reserves with a self-verification tool and maintains a separate protection fund.
BloFin is an international, futures-focused exchange that competes on depth of control rather than scale. Two things set it apart. First, its copy trading product is one of the most configurable in the crypto-native group. The minimum to copy a trader is 100 USDT, in line with Bybit’s Classic floor and above Bitget’s 50 USDT.
So, BloFin is not the cheapest entry, but its leaderboard reports risk-adjusted performance metrics, the Sharpe, Sortino, and Calmar ratios, alongside the usual ROI, win rate, and maximum drawdown. That layer goes beyond what most copy leaderboards show.
BloFin’s copy product supports three modes: Smart Copy syncs, leverage, margin mode, and sizing with the lead. Fixed Amount uses the same USDT margin per copied position, and Fixed Ratio scales each copy by a chosen multiple. Each copy carries its own take-profit and stop-loss, a cross or isolated margin choice, and copy-or-set leverage. Lead traders earn a standard 10% profit share, currently up to 20%, and copy trading is native on both futures and spot.
On the futures side, BloFin natively supports USDT-margined, USDC-margined, and coin-margined perpetual contracts in a single account. Traders who hold mixed collateral can post margin in the asset they already hold rather than converting first.
Its base futures taker fee of 0.0600% is mid-pack, higher than the 0.0500% charged by Binance, OKX, and Kraken. So, BloFin is not the venue to pick on fees alone. Where its fee schedule does stand out is the VIP path: a trader reaches VIP 1 spot pricing at 50,000 USDT in held assets, a far lower bar than the seven-figure 30-day volume some larger venues require for a comparable tier.
BloFin publishes a 1:1 proof of reserves verifiable through Merkle-tree records, with third-party tracking via Nansen and a stated policy of not lending customer assets without consent. The product menu also includes spot, an Earn suite (Simple Earn, RWUSD, and Dual Investment), Launchpad, and trading bots, across iOS and Android.
MEXC competes on listing speed and base fees. It waives spot maker fees entirely, and spot takers pay between 0.0000% and 0.0500%, depending on the pair and promotion, the lowest base spot schedule in this group. Its coverage of long-tail altcoins is among the widest in the industry. That makes it a main draw for traders seeking early access to new tokens.
Its copy trading product is smaller in roster terms but carries the loosest entry here: copy funds start at 30 USDT, with three sizing modes (Fixed Amount, Smart Ratio, Fixed Ratio) and a lead profit share that defaults to 10% and can be set up to 30% in public mode. Futures leverage runs to 500x on BTC and ETH, a cap to treat as a risk ceiling rather than a feature, and MEXC publishes a monthly Merkle-tree proof of reserves audited by Hacken.
KuCoin is a long-running international exchange known for fast listings, lending markets, and an active bot product. It runs a Copy Trading Hub built into the futures interface. Copy margin starts at 10 USDT per copy (capped at 10,000 USDT), positions run isolated margin only, coverage spans more than 100 USDT-margined perpetual pairs, and lead traders earn a profit share from 10%.
Base spot fees are on the standard line, with a 20% discount for paying in KCS. Besides, Coin publishes a monthly proof of reserves audited by Hacken. The caveat for new signups is legal history rather than product: the exchange pleaded guilty in January 2025 to US charges over unlicensed money transmission, paid roughly $300 million in penalties, and exited the US market.
Kraken is one of the oldest crypto exchanges still active, founded in 2011, with a strong regulatory footprint and a security record that includes no hack resulting in loss of customer funds.
International users access Kraken Pro for advanced order types and lower volume-tiered fees, plus Kraken Futures for perpetuals. Kraken does not offer a native copy trading product, which is the main gap for traders who want that feature.
Fee tiers tighten quickly with volume: the 0.40% taker fee at the base drops to 0.24% above $50,000 in 30-day volume, then steps down further. In May 2026, Kraken raised maximum leverage on BTC and ETH perpetuals to 100x for eligible jurisdictions, with US and EU clients excluded. It’s proof of reserves that pairs an external accounting firm’s attestation with Merkle-tree user verification, a deeper check than the self-published standard most offshore venues use.
A few features matter more for non-US traders than they do for US users:
Liquidity is the floor underneath all of it. According to CoinGecko’s exchange rankings, the largest venues concentrate most of the international perpetuals volume, which matters because copy execution quality and slippage both scale with venue depth.
International exchanges operate under a different regulatory environment than US venues. Enforcement actions and licensing changes tracked by outlets such as CoinDesk show that product availability can shift with little notice and varies widely by country. Before depositing, traders should:
There is no single best exchange. Bybit and OKX have the deepest liquidity, Bitget has one of the largest copy trading rosters and a 50 USDT per-trader entry, MEXC has the widest altcoin selection and lowest base spot fees, and BloFin pairs native USDT, USDC, and coin-margined futures in one account with risk-adjusted copy analytics. The right pick depends on whether a trader prioritizes liquidity, copy trading, altcoins, or collateral flexibility, and on whether the venue serves their jurisdiction.
Most do not serve US residents, including Bybit, Bitget, BloFin, MEXC, and KuCoin. OKX is available to US persons with state-level restrictions, while Kraken serves US users through a separate regulated entity with a narrower product set than its international offering. Traders should confirm eligibility before signing up, since attempting to bypass restrictions can lead to frozen funds.
Among the crypto-native venues compared here, Bitget has the lowest per-trader entry point at 50 USDT to copy a trader through Smart Copy, while OKX charges copies per order from 10 USDT, with the total allocation set by the user. BloFin and Bybit’s Copy Trading Classic both require 100 USDT, though individual lead traders can set higher floors.
Safety depends on the specific venue. The practical standard is to choose an exchange that publishes proof of reserves on a regular cadence, supports hardware-backed two-factor authentication, and stores customer assets separately from corporate funds. BloFin, Bybit, OKX, and Bitget all currently publish proof of reserves. Bybit’s is audited monthly by Hacken, and BloFin’s is 1:1 and verifiable through Merkle-tree records with third-party tracking via Nansen.
Most do, through third-party payment processors, with coverage that varies by region. SEPA transfers, local bank rails, and card payments are common, and several venues also support stablecoin on-ramps from regional fiat. Availability of any specific method depends on the trader’s country.
MEXC typically leads on long-tail altcoin listings and is known for adding new tokens quickly after their initial liquidity event, often with zero spot maker fees. Traders should weigh that breadth against the thinner liquidity and higher volatility that very new listings tend to carry.
The best international crypto exchange is the one whose product mix matches the trader’s workflow and serves their jurisdiction. Active perpetual traders gravitate toward Bybit and OKX for depth.
Copy trading users choose between Bitget’s roster size and lower entry and BloFin’s multi-margin futures and risk-adjusted copy analytics. Altcoin-focused traders lean on MEXC, and those who value a long, regulated track record over social features lean on Kraken. Match the venue to the job, confirm access, and check reserves before funding an account.
Information as of June 2026. Exchange fees, product availability, and regional access change frequently. This article is editorial and is not investment advice.
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