How to Buy Bitcoin in Germany: Regulated Routes, Custody, Fees and Tax

By: WEEX|2026/07/16 06:12:53

Educational overview for users in Germany. This is not investment or tax advice (keine Anlage- oder Steuerberatung). Figures and rules are dated snapshots — verify current terms and the current legal position before acting. Bitcoin is volatile and you can lose money.

If you are in Germany and want to understand how buying Bitcoin actually works, the honest starting point is the set of regulated routes available to German residents. Germany is a MiCA-regulated market, so licensed, supervised providers are the normal way to buy — and they are what most of this page is about. This is a factual guide, not a ranking and not a promotion.

1. Regulated routes for German users

Several categories of regulated provider serve German users. They are listed by type, in no particular order — this is not a ranking or an endorsement of any one provider:

  • Neobrokers (e.g. Trade Republic) — investing apps that offer Bitcoin alongside stocks and ETFs, operating under German/EU supervision.
  • Regulated German apps (e.g. BISON, operated within the Börse Stuttgart group) — German-domiciled apps focused on crypto.
  • MiCA-licensed crypto exchanges (e.g. Bitvavo, Kraken) — EU-supervised exchanges that serve German customers under the MiCA framework.
  • German crypto marketplaces (e.g. bitcoin.de) — long-established German platforms.
  • Banks (Sparkasse, Volksbanken/VR): many German banks are mostly educational on this topic and are generally not direct Bitcoin sellers today; some are exploring regulated offerings. Treat bank pages as information, and check whether your specific bank actually offers a purchase route.

On verification (KYC): regulated providers in Germany and the EU are required by anti-money-laundering law (GwG) and the MiCA framework to verify your identity before you buy. This is a normal, standard, protective step — not an obstacle to work around. This page does not cover, and does not endorse, any method of buying without identity verification.

2. Custody: who holds the keys

Once you buy, the Bitcoin has to be held somewhere:

  • Exchange/custodial custody: the provider holds the Bitcoin for you. Convenient, but you rely on the provider's security and solvency.
  • Self-custody: you hold the Bitcoin in your own wallet and control the private keys. A cold-storage (offline) wallet reduces online-attack exposure but puts full responsibility — including backup of your recovery phrase — on you.

The common phrase is "not your keys, not your coins." Which model suits you depends on how much responsibility you want to hold yourself.

3. Fees: what you actually pay

Total cost is more than a single headline number. Look for:

  • Spread: the gap between buy and sell price, often where "zero-commission" services earn their margin.
  • Explicit fees: trading commissions, deposit/withdrawal fees, and network (on-chain) fees.
  • Order types: a market order fills immediately at the current price; a limit order lets you set a price. The order type affects your effective cost.

Compare the all-in cost — spread plus fees — rather than any single advertised rate.

-- Price

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4. Tax: the German 1-year holding period

Germany has a distinctive rule that many international guides miss. Under the private-sales rules (§23 EStG), gains on Bitcoin held as a private asset for more than one year are generally tax-free; gains on Bitcoin sold within a year may be taxable, subject to an exemption threshold. There are conditions and exceptions, and rules can change.

This is a factual note, not tax advice (keine Steuerberatung). For your own situation, consult a Steuerberater (tax adviser) or the current guidance from the Bundesfinanzministerium.

5. Where WEEX fits

WEEX is a cryptocurrency exchange, and it is one factual option among the regulated routes above — not the headline. Two honest points:

  • Futures-first: WEEX's primary market is crypto futures (derivatives). If both spot and futures are available for an asset, futures are the platform's core product; nothing here suggests spot in preference to futures.
  • EUR on-ramp reality: for German users, buying spot Bitcoin typically starts with a EUR on-ramp step rather than a direct euro purchase everywhere. That is a real friction, stated plainly so you can factor it in.

For most first-time German buyers, the domestic and EU-regulated routes in Section 1 are the straightforward starting point.

Related pages

  • https://www.weex.com/wiki/article/bitcoin-forecast-third-party-analyst-scenarios-and-drivers-educational-pk1vi5l5gpfwd3n6ipahdo19 — third-party, dated Bitcoin scenario ranges (not predictions from us)
  • https://www.weex.com/wiki/article/metaplanet-stock-3350-price-the-bitcoin-treasury-strategy-and-board-talking-points-mavn7j1epz3mkfthjomrywul — a listed company that holds Bitcoin on its balance sheet
  • https://www.weex.com/wiki/article/paypal-stock-pypl-price-the-turnaround-take-rate-debate-and-board-talking-points-fgit5oe44j983b90kscxyac7 — a payments company with a crypto product angle

This page is for information only and is not investment or tax advice (keine Anlage- oder Steuerberatung). Regulated providers require identity verification by law. Rules, fees and figures are dated snapshots — verify the current position before acting. Bitcoin is volatile; you can lose money.

Disclaimer: This content is provided for general branding and informational purposes only and doesn't constitute financial, investment, legal, or tax advice. Any events, rewards, online events, or related information mentioned herein should not be considered a recommendation, solicitation, or invitation to purchase, sell, trade, or otherwise deal in any crypto assets or to use any services. Crypto assets are highly volatile and may result in loss. WEEX services and online events may not be available in all regions and are subject to applicable laws, regulations, and eligibility requirements. You are responsible for ensuring that your use of WEEX services complies with local laws and for carefully assessing the risks before participating in any crypto-related activities.

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