🏦Custodial vs Self-Custody: Who Controls Your Funds?
Summary
The most important distinction in crypto: do you actually have your cryptocurrencies or do you only have a debt from an exchange? The difference can mean between having your funds and losing them if the exchange collapses.
Custodial: the banking model in crypto
When you buy crypto on Coinbase, Binance or any centralized exchange and leave it there, you do not have the private keys. The exchange does. Technically, you have a promise from the exchange to return that crypto. This is exactly the same as having money in a bank. Crypto history is full of cases: Mt. Gox (850,000 BTC), QuadrigaCX ($250M), FTX ($8B).
Self-custody: being your own bank
With self-custody, private keys are in your exclusive possession. No one else can move your funds without your authorization. It does not matter if Binance collapses, if the government freezes accounts: your funds are on the blockchain, accessible only with your keys. The responsibility is yours but the sovereignty is also yours.
The practical rule
The pros rule: keep on exchanges only what you trade actively in the next few days. Everything else in self-custody. For daily use: hot wallet. For long-term savings: hardware wallet. "Not your keys, not your coins" is not a slogan — it is a lesson learned at the price of blood.
Key takeaways
- Custodial = exchange has your keys = depends on their solvency
- Self-custody = you have the keys = total sovereignty
- Only keep on exchanges what you will trade soon
- For savings: always self-custody, preferably hardware wallet
- FTX, Mt. Gox and QuadrigaCX prove exchanges can collapse
