Germany’s Savings and Cooperative Banks Launch Crypto Trading
Germany’s most conservative banks are about to let millions of customers buy Bitcoin. The country that was suspicious of credit cards is rolling out cryptocurrency trading through its cooperative and savings banks, the institutions that handle everyday finances for tens of millions of people.
July 4, 2026 – 2:10 pm
Image by: Canva
TL;DR
Germany’s cooperative and savings banks are rolling out crypto trading to tens of millions of retail customers. DZ Bank already has a MiCA-licensed platform, and DekaBank is building one for the savings bank network’s 50 million customers.
Germany’s cooperative banks and savings banks, the local institutions that handle mortgages, current accounts, and small business loans for tens of millions of customers, are rolling out their own cryptocurrency trading services. The move will bring digital asset trading to a population that could barely be persuaded to use credit cards a decade ago.
Some of Germany’s roughly 650 cooperative banks already offer a crypto platform developed by DZ Bank, the sector’s central institution. For the country’s approximately 340 savings banks, DekaBank is building a separate product scheduled to launch later this year.
Each local bank will decide individually whether to opt in, but early interest is strong across both networks.
From “incalculable risks” to retail product
The shift is striking. Just four years ago, Germany’s savings banks declined to offer a crypto trading platform to retail customers, citing “incalculable risks.” A planned Bitcoin pilot was cancelled in the spring of 2022 after an internal dispute over direction. What changed was regulation.
The EU’s Markets in Crypto-Assets regulation, which replaced fragmented national rules with a single licensing framework, gave conservative institutions the legal certainty they needed. DZ Bank secured its MiCA licence from BaFin at the end of December 2025, enabling it to offer “meinKrypto”, a digital asset trading platform integrated directly into the VR Banking App.
Trust as competitive advantage
The banks are betting that familiarity will do what crypto exchanges could not. A survey by crypto infrastructure provider Boerse Stuttgart Digital found that Germans trust their primary bank more than twice as much as specialised crypto trading platforms, at roughly 38% to 19%.
“Now, trading takes place in a familiar environment,” said Claus Reder, board member at Volksbank Raiffeisenbank Würzburg, one of the first cooperative banks to launch the service. "That gives the trading service a certain credibility.”
The same survey found that only a quarter of German respondents had invested in crypto, broadly in line with Italy at 24% and France at 23%. Europe’s tightening fintech regulations, which now span MiCA, DORA, and the new anti-money laundering authority, appear to be making the asset class more palatable to institutions that would never have touched it under the old patchwork of national rules.
Scale and demand
DZ Bank’s platform currently supports trading in Bitcoin, Ethereum, Litecoin, and Cardano. Over 71% of cooperative banks in Germany have expressed interest in providing the service.