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Best crypto exchanges in Turkey

Exchanges available, CMB authorisation required
As of 2026-06-21Last reviewed 2026-06-21
This is general information, not legal, tax, or financial advice. Verify the current rules with a qualified local professional and the official regulator before acting.

Crypto exchanges are available in Turkey, and the market is large and active. Since Law No. 7518 took effect in July 2024, any platform operating in Turkey must be authorised by the Capital Markets Board of Turkey (CMB, known as the SPK), which publishes the list of operators on its website. Locally based platforms such as BtcTurk and Paribu support Turkish lira and are within that process, and several international platforms are also accessible. The single most important check is whether a platform is on the CMB list, because only authorised platforms may legally operate.

What availability means in Turkey

Turkey does not restrict residents from buying and selling crypto, so the question is not whether you can use an exchange but which one is operating lawfully. The dividing line is CMB authorisation. Law No. 7518 made authorisation mandatory for crypto asset service providers, the CMB set capital and operational requirements in communiqués published on 13 March 2025, and existing operators entered a transition process while the regulator works through applications. Because that process is still running as of June 2026, a platform's place on the CMB list is the live signal of whether it is inside the framework, and it can change as authorisations are granted, refused, or withdrawn.

Platforms that serve Turkish residents

The most direct route for a Turkish resident is a locally based platform that supports lira deposits and withdrawals through Turkish banking. Established names in this category include BtcTurk and Paribu, both long present in the Turkish market and within the CMB authorisation process. Several international platforms have also served Turkish users, with varying lira support and product ranges. The table below is a neutral summary of factors to weigh rather than a ranking, and it is not an endorsement of any platform. Confirm each point against the platform and the CMB list before you act.

FactorWhat to check
CMB statusWhether the platform appears on the CMB list of operators or authorised providers at spk.gov.tr
Lira supportWhether you can deposit and withdraw Turkish lira through your bank
CustodyWho holds the assets, and whether the platform follows the CMB custody and safeguarding rules
FeesTrading and withdrawal fees in general terms, plus any spread on lira pairs
AssetsWhether the coins you want are listed and supported for the lira pairs you need
Security and supportAccount security features, track record, and Turkish language customer support

How to buy compliantly

To stay inside the framework, choose a platform that is on the CMB list, complete the identity verification the platform applies under MASAK anti money laundering rules, and fund the account with lira through your bank. Buy the asset you want, and if you plan to hold for the long term consider moving it to a wallet you control. Remember that the CBRT payment ban means you cannot lawfully use crypto to pay for goods and services in Turkey, so treat exchange activity as investing and transferring rather than spending. See the Turkey buy bitcoin page for a step by step walkthrough.

Compare available exchanges in Turkey

See the platforms that are genuinely available to residents, with their registrations and how to sign up compliantly. Verify current CMB status before acting.

Compare available exchanges

Regulator and sources

Frequently asked questions

Which crypto exchanges are available in Turkey?

Locally based platforms such as BtcTurk and Paribu serve Turkish residents with lira deposits and are within the CMB authorisation process, and several international platforms are also accessible to Turkish users. Check the CMB list for a platform's current status before signing up. This is general information, not advice.

Do exchanges in Turkey need a CMB licence?

Yes. Under Law No. 7518, crypto asset service providers operating in Turkey must be authorised by the Capital Markets Board (CMB). The CMB publishes the list of operators and authorised platforms on its website, and only licensed platforms may operate. Verify current status on the CMB list.

Can I deposit Turkish lira on a crypto exchange?

Yes. Locally based platforms support lira deposits and withdrawals through Turkish banking, which is the most direct way to buy crypto in Turkey. Availability of lira rails on international platforms varies, so check before you rely on one. Using crypto to pay for goods and services is separately banned.

How do I choose a crypto exchange in Turkey?

Start with whether the platform is on the CMB list, then consider lira support, fees in general terms, custody and security, and the assets you want. Availability and licence status matter most because only authorised platforms may legally operate. This is general information, not investment advice.

Is Binance available in Turkey?

International platforms including Binance have served Turkish users, but availability and the local entity's status depend on the CMB authorisation process. Confirm a platform's current status on the CMB list at spk.gov.tr before signing up, since the licensing landscape is still settling.

Platform availability and CMB authorisation status in Turkey change as the regulator processes applications. A platform on the list today may change status, and a new platform may be added. Confirm the current CMB list and lira support before signing up.

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