Buying cryptocurrency on a regulated exchange is the standard entry point for beginners. The process is simpler than most tutorials make it sound.
What you’re buying
When you buy bitcoin on an exchange, you receive a balance entry on that exchange’s ledger — not a physical coin or a file on your computer. The exchange holds the underlying asset in custody on your behalf, similar to cash in a brokerage account. To hold coins directly on the blockchain, you withdraw to a wallet you control.
How a regulated exchange works
The typical flow:
- Create an account on a regulated exchange available in your country.
- Verify your identity (required by anti-money-laundering regulations).
- Link a bank account or payment method.
- Place a market buy order for a mainstream asset like bitcoin or ether.
Market orders execute at roughly the current price. Fees apply on most platforms — check them before confirming.
First purchase checklist
- Use a small amount you can afford to lose while learning.
- Stick to mainstream coins (BTC, ETH) with deep liquidity.
- Complete the full loop once: deposit → buy → optionally sell → withdraw.
- Do not keep more on the exchange than you’d accept losing to platform failure.
An exchange account is not a bank account. If the platform fails, gets hacked, or freezes withdrawals, funds can be stuck or lost. Use regulated venues in your jurisdiction and treat exchange balances as temporary.