Coinbase Advanced unveils new modular interface design with over 20 customizable widgets

Coinbase Advanced unveils new modular interface design with over 20 customizable widgets

The redesigned trading platform lets users drag and drop widgets, trade stocks alongside crypto, and access TradingView-powered charting in a single interface

Coinbase just gave its Advanced trading platform a facelift, and this one goes deeper than cosmetics. The exchange rolled out a fully modular interface that lets traders build their own custom layouts using more than 20 widgets, turning the platform into something closer to a Bloomberg terminal for the crypto-native crowd.

The upgrade also introduces side-by-side trading of stocks and crypto on the same screen. Coinbase has been calling itself the “Everything Exchange” for a while now. This is what that looks like in practice.

What the new interface actually does

The core change is drag-and-drop modularity. Traders can rearrange their workspace however they want, pulling in widgets for order books, charts, position tracking, and more.

Advertisement

Coinbase described the system as “modular, institutional-grade, and built for cross-asset execution.”

The charting engine runs on TradingView and comes loaded with 104 indicators and multiple chart types, along with custom drawing tools.

On the trading side, the platform supports over 550 spot pairs. Maker fees start as low as 0%.

Stocks and crypto, same window

Most professional traders managing mixed portfolios currently juggle multiple platforms. One for stocks, one for crypto, maybe a third for derivatives. Coinbase is betting that collapsing all of that into a single modular workspace will be compelling enough to pull traders away from their existing setups.

The competitive landscape

Modular trading interfaces are not new. Binance has offered customizable layouts for years. Bybit, OKX, and Kraken Pro all let traders rearrange their dashboards to some degree. What Coinbase is doing differently is combining that modularity with cross-asset trading and TradingView integration in a single package, all under the umbrella of a US-regulated exchange.

Over 550 spot pairs puts Coinbase Advanced in a competitive range with larger global platforms, though it still trails behind Binance’s broader listing catalog.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Coinbase Advanced unveils new modular interface design with over 20 customizable widgets

Coinbase Advanced unveils new modular interface design with over 20 customizable widgets

The redesigned trading platform lets users drag and drop widgets, trade stocks alongside crypto, and access TradingView-powered charting in a single interface

Coinbase just gave its Advanced trading platform a facelift, and this one goes deeper than cosmetics. The exchange rolled out a fully modular interface that lets traders build their own custom layouts using more than 20 widgets, turning the platform into something closer to a Bloomberg terminal for the crypto-native crowd.

The upgrade also introduces side-by-side trading of stocks and crypto on the same screen. Coinbase has been calling itself the “Everything Exchange” for a while now. This is what that looks like in practice.

What the new interface actually does

The core change is drag-and-drop modularity. Traders can rearrange their workspace however they want, pulling in widgets for order books, charts, position tracking, and more.

Advertisement

Coinbase described the system as “modular, institutional-grade, and built for cross-asset execution.”

The charting engine runs on TradingView and comes loaded with 104 indicators and multiple chart types, along with custom drawing tools.

On the trading side, the platform supports over 550 spot pairs. Maker fees start as low as 0%.

Stocks and crypto, same window

Most professional traders managing mixed portfolios currently juggle multiple platforms. One for stocks, one for crypto, maybe a third for derivatives. Coinbase is betting that collapsing all of that into a single modular workspace will be compelling enough to pull traders away from their existing setups.

The competitive landscape

Modular trading interfaces are not new. Binance has offered customizable layouts for years. Bybit, OKX, and Kraken Pro all let traders rearrange their dashboards to some degree. What Coinbase is doing differently is combining that modularity with cross-asset trading and TradingView integration in a single package, all under the umbrella of a US-regulated exchange.

Over 550 spot pairs puts Coinbase Advanced in a competitive range with larger global platforms, though it still trails behind Binance’s broader listing catalog.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.