Launch Your Own Crypto Exchange in 90 Days: A Practical Framework
Alex Smith
2 hours ago
If you've been in crypto long enough, you've heard the pitch: "Launch your own exchange and capture trading fees." It sounds simple. It's not.
But launching a crypto exchange has actually become simpler in the last 2 years. Not simple—simpler. And for the first time, it's realistic to launch in 90 days if you do it right.
The difference: you don't build. You deploy a platform.
This is the practical framework for actually doing it.
Phase 1: Validation (Weeks 1–2)
Before you spend a dollar on infrastructure or licensing, answer three questions:
Do you have users? This is the only question that matters. If you're starting with zero users and thinking "users will come because it's an exchange," stop. Exchanges are commodities. Users come if you have something differentiated: distribution, brand, a specific token or niche, or existing customers.
If you have none of these, launch something else. Don't launch an exchange.
Where will your liquidity come from? A brand-new exchange has zero trading volume. Users can't trade because there are no counterparties. You need liquidity from day one: either market makers, an aggregated liquidity pool, or API integration with existing exchanges.
Sketch this out: who are your market makers, how much will they charge, what tokens will they support?
What is your revenue model? Are you taking trading fees? Listing fees? Do you need to break even immediately or can you burn capital for 2 years?
If you can't answer these three questions, you're not ready to launch.
Phase 2: Platform Selection (Week 2–3)
You need to select a crypto exchange development platform. This is your core infrastructure. Evaluate on:
Feature completeness. Does it support the assets you want to trade? Does it integrate with the custody provider you want to use? Does it have the trading features your users need (spot trading, margin, derivatives)?
Regulatory support. What jurisdictions does it support? Can it deploy KYC/AML workflows for your target market? Does it handle suspicious activity reporting?
Customization. Can you white-label the UI? Can you integrate your own backend systems? Can you modify the trading rules?
Cost. What's the licensing fee? Are there transaction fees? What's included in the license (support, updates, infrastructure)?
Select a platform that covers 80% of your requirements, not one that promises 100%. You'll customize the remaining 20% yourself.
Phase 3: Build the Minimum (Weeks 3–6)
Deploy the platform and build the essentials:
Brand and website. Customize the UI to match your brand. This is the user-facing layer.
KYC/AML workflows. Set up identity verification. This is non-negotiable for institutional trading.
Liquidity integration. Connect your market makers or aggregated liquidity source. Test the flow of orders.
Payment rails. How will users fund their accounts? Set up fiat on-ramps or stablecoin deposits.
API integrations. If you're serving traders who want to use bots, expose REST and WebSocket APIs.
Support infrastructure. Set up ticketing and dispute resolution. You'll need to handle user issues.
This is 4 weeks of focused engineering. Your team: 1 backend engineer (to handle integrations), 1 frontend engineer (to customize the UI), 1 ops person (to manage infrastructure and support).
Phase 4: Market Making (Weeks 6–8)
You can't launch with zero liquidity. Spend 2 weeks bootstrapping trading volume:
Reach out to market makers. Explain your platform, your assets, your expected volume. Negotiate terms.
Offer incentives. You might need to subsidize market makers early (cover their losses, or pay them per-trade volume). Budget for this.
Load initial volume. Work with market makers to simulate early trading, build order books, get spreads tight.
You won't have real organic volume yet. That's okay. Market makers create the appearance of liquidity until real traders arrive.
Phase 5: Soft Launch (Week 8–9)
Launch to a small closed group:
- Your community (email list, Twitter followers, Discord)
- Market makers
- Your advisors
- Early customers
Don't promote widely. Use this week to find bugs, fix UX issues, and stress-test operations. Budget for 50–500 users.
Phase 6: Public Launch (Week 9–12)
Open to the public and execute on customer acquisition. How you acquire users depends on your differentiation:
If you have distribution: Use your existing audience. Your email list, your community, your brand.
If you're targeting a niche: Announce in forums, Discord servers, Telegram groups relevant to your niche.
If you're targeting a token: Partner with the token's community to launch trading on your exchange first.
Expect slow growth initially. Focus on operations and support quality. You're building a reputation.
What Can Actually Get Done in 90 Days
With this framework, here's what's realistic:
Definitely possible:
- Deploy a functional exchange
- Support spot trading on 5–10 tokens
- Handle KYC/AML for users in your target jurisdiction
- Achieve $100K–$1M in daily volume (with market maker support)
- Launch with
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