Charles Schwab, the brokerage managing over $12 trillion in client assets, launched direct spot Bitcoin and Ethereum trading for its retail clients on May 13. The new platform, called Schwab Crypto, charges a 0.75% trading fee and is powered by Paxos alongside Schwab Premier Bank.
Look, when a firm this size decides to let millions of everyday investors buy actual Bitcoin from the same account where they hold their index funds, that’s not a product launch. That’s a structural shift in how America interacts with digital assets.
The fee war heats up
Schwab’s 0.75% fee slots neatly between its two biggest competitors. Fidelity charges 1% for direct crypto purchases, while E*TRADE offers a leaner 0.50% rate for Bitcoin and Ethereum trades.
In English: Schwab is undercutting the largest crypto-friendly brokerage by 25 basis points, while positioning itself as the premium option compared to E*TRADE’s discount approach. The classic Goldilocks strategy.
The pricing is aggressive enough to matter. For a $10,000 Bitcoin purchase, a Schwab client pays $75 in fees versus $100 at Fidelity. That $25 difference won’t change anyone’s life, but multiply it across millions of transactions from Schwab’s massive client base and you start to understand why Fidelity might need to revisit its fee schedule sooner rather than later.
The infrastructure behind the platform carries weight too. Paxos obtained OCC-regulated national trust status back in December 2025, which gives Schwab a regulatory foundation that pure-play crypto exchanges have spent years trying to achieve. For the risk-averse investor who’s been watching Bitcoin from the sidelines, that kind of regulatory clarity removes a significant psychological barrier.
Why the timing matters
Here’s the thing. Schwab isn’t launching into a red-hot retail frenzy. Global retail crypto activity hit $979 billion in Q1 2026, representing an 11% decline from the prior year. The crowd that was panic-buying dog coins in 2021 has largely moved on to other hobbies.
That context makes Schwab’s timing look less like trend-chasing and more like strategic positioning. The firm is entering when retail participation is cooling, not when it’s euphoric. That’s the kind of move a $12 trillion institution makes when it’s building for years, not quarters.
Bitcoin currently trades around $81,000 with a market cap of roughly $1.615 trillion. Ethereum’s market cap sits at $286 billion. Together, the two assets represent over 60% of the total crypto market, which explains why Schwab chose these two as its entry point rather than trying to list dozens of tokens on day one.
The demand signal from traditional banking customers is hard to ignore. About 17% of Chase’s checking account users have invested in crypto, a data point that likely didn’t escape Schwab’s strategists. If even a fraction of Schwab’s client base shows similar interest, the volume implications are enormous.
Bitcoin dominance in the broader crypto market currently stands at 60.1%, reinforcing the logic of a Bitcoin-first approach. Schwab has indicated plans to expand its offerings in the coming months, but starting with the two most liquid, most institutional-grade digital assets is the textbook play for a traditional brokerage testing the waters.
What this means for investors
The most immediate impact is convenience. Before today, a Schwab client who wanted to own actual Bitcoin had to open a separate account on Coinbase, Kraken, or another exchange. They needed a different login, a different funding process, and a different tax reporting workflow. Now they can buy Bitcoin in the same interface where they check their 401(k) balance.
That sounds trivial. It’s not. The history of fintech is essentially the history of removing friction. Every time you make something one click easier, adoption curves steepen. PayPal didn’t invent online payments, it just made them less annoying. Schwab is doing something similar for crypto.
The competitive landscape is shifting fast. With Schwab, Fidelity, and E*TRADE all offering spot crypto trading, the traditional brokerage industry is collectively normalizing Bitcoin and Ethereum as standard portfolio components. This creates pressure on holdouts like Vanguard, which has historically resisted crypto integration.
For the broader crypto market, increased retail access through regulated brokerages could help reverse the recent contraction in retail participation. When crypto-native exchanges were the only option, the barrier to entry included unfamiliar platforms, security concerns, and regulatory ambiguity. Schwab’s brand carries decades of trust with conservative investors who wouldn’t touch Binance with a ten-foot pole.
The risk worth watching is fee compression. If Schwab’s entry triggers Fidelity to cut its rate, and E*TRADE responds by going even lower, the brokerage industry could find itself in a race to zero on crypto trading fees, the same pattern that played out with equity commissions a few years ago. That’s great for consumers but potentially painful for brokerage margins.
There’s also the question of how much new capital this actually brings into crypto versus simply rerouting existing activity. If current Coinbase users simply move their trading to Schwab for convenience, the net effect on Bitcoin’s price is negligible. The real catalyst would be the Schwab client who owns nothing but index funds and, for the first time, allocates 2% of their portfolio to Bitcoin because it’s now sitting right next to their S&P 500 position. That marginal buyer, multiplied across millions of accounts, is what could meaningfully move the needle on demand.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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