Wallets&Exchanges

What Is a DEX? Your Complete Guide to Decentralised Exchanges

If you’ve traded traditional stocks, you could only execute trades within market hours (e.g. 9:30 am to 4:30 pm). At the same time, your funds sit with a custodian or centralised entity that brokerages for you. 

What if you could trade permissionlessly without ever waiting for the market to open or dependant on a middle man to process your trades? 

Introducing Decentralised Exchanges, or DEX, built for 24/7 permissionless trading without relying on a centralised entity. 

In this guide, we’ll walkthrough:

  • What is a DEX and how does it work?

  • The biggest DEXs you should know

  • DEX vs CEX: Which one is right for you?

  • How to use DexScreener like a pro

What Is a DEX (Decentralised Exchange)?

A DEX is a cryptocurrency trading platform that lets you trade directly from your wallet without handing over custody of your funds to a centralized company. Think of it like peer-to-peer trading, but automated through smart contracts instead of relying on a company like Coinbase to hold your assets.

Here’s the key difference: On centralised exchanges (CEXs), you deposit Bitcoin into the exchange’s wallet. You’re trusting them to give it back when you withdraw. On a DEX, your tokens are held in your wallet and you’re trading directly with other users through smart contracts.

Why this matters in 2026? After FTX collapsed in 2022 and $8 billion in customer funds vanished, ‘not your keys, not your crypto’ became more than a slogan. DEXs eliminate custodial risk entirely because the exchange never holds your funds. However, please note that DEX’s also carry a significant amount of risks as well and ultimately comes down to personal preference. 

How Does a DEX Actually Work? Breaking Down the Tech

Most people think DEXs work like traditional order books, meaning buyer meets seller at a price. But in fact, most modern DEXs use something called Automated Market Makers (AMMs).

Real World Example: Imagine you want to swap 1 ETH for USDC on Uniswap (the most popular DEX). Here’s what happens behind the scenes:

  1. You connect your MetaMask wallet to Uniswap

  2. You approve the smart contract to access your ETH (this costs gas)

  3. The AMM calculates the swap price using a formula: x * y = k (more on this below)

  4. You execute the trade. ETH leaves your wallet, USDC is received.

  5. No order book. No matching engine. No central server.

The AMM Formula Explained: Every trading pair (like ETH/USDC) has a liquidity pool which is a pot of both tokens locked in a smart contract and the ratio determines the price.

  • If the pool has 100 ETH and 300,000 USDC, 1 ETH = 3,000 USDC

  • When you buy 1 ETH, you remove ETH from the pool and add USDC

  • This changes the ratio, moving the price up (supply and demand)

  • The formula x * y = k ensures the pool stays balanced 

  • X and Y being the quantity of each token. 

To learn more about Automated Market Makers, read our guide here.

Pro Tip: When trading on DEXs, check the liquidity depth before swapping large amounts. Low liquidity = high slippage. If a pool only has $50K total value locked (TVL), swapping $10K will move the price 5-10% against you. Use tools like DexScreener to check pool liquidity first.

The Biggest DEXs You Need to Know in 2026

Not all DEXs are created equal. Here’s the breakdown by blockchain and use case:

1. Uniswap (Ethereum)

  • Monthly Volume: $45B

  • Best For: ERC-20 token swaps, new token launches

  • Gas Fees: $5-50 per swap (depending on network congestion)

  • Unique Feature: Concentrated liquidity (earn more fees as a liquidity provider)

2. PancakeSwap (BNB Chain)

  • Monthly Volume: $12B

  • Best For: Low-cost trading (gas fees under $0.50)

  • Why Traders Use It: Same interface as Uniswap, but 100x cheaper

  • Catch: BNB Chain is more centralized than Ethereum

3. Jupiter (Solana)

  • Monthly Volume: $25B

  • Best For: Lightning-fast swaps (trades settle in 400ms)

  • Gas Fees: $0.0001 per trade

  • Catch: Solana has had 7 network outages since 2021

DEX vs CEX: Which Should You Actually Use?

The ‘DEX vs CEX’  debate isn’t about picking sides – it’s about knowing when to use each. Use DEXs for what they’re good at. Use CEXs for what they’re good at. Don’t be a maximalist. Let’s look at when you should use them:

When to Use a DEX

When to Use a CEX (like BitMEX)

You’re trading new, unlisted tokens 

 You want zero custodial risk 

You’re in a country where CEXs are banned or restricted 

You’re a privacy advocate (no KYC required) 

You’re providing liquidity to earn passive yield

You’re unfamiliar with DeFi, knowing there are a lot of scams and malicious platforms 

You want to avoid the DeFi headache, connecting multiple wallets and chains.

You know DEXs do get hack and prefer a CEX with a battle-tested history (BitMEX never lost any customer funds)

You’re trading with leverage (1x-100x on perpetual contracts) 

You need customer support when something breaks 

Gas fees would eat your profits (DEX swaps cost $5-50 on Ethereum when activity is high) 

You want instant execution without slippage 

You need fiat on/off ramps (buy crypto with credit card or bank transfer)

Real-World Example: Imagine you swapped $10K USDC for a new memecoin on Uniswap. Paid gas fee totalling to $35 (let’s assume network activity was high). The token rugged 2 hours later (developers dumped). Total loss: $10,035. No recourse. No support team. It’s the wild west in crypto.

Pro Tip: One wrong address copy-paste and your $50K is gone forever. No customer support can reverse it. Always send a test transaction first (even if it costs extra gas fees).

The 3 Biggest Risks of Using DEXs (And How to Avoid Them)

DEXs eliminate custodial risk, but they introduce 3 new risks most beginners don’t understand. Let’s dive into it:

Risk 1: Smart Contract Exploits

Every DEX is built with code. It’s no secret code can carry bugs.

What Happened:

  • Poly Network (2021): $600M stolen via smart contract exploit

  • Wormhole Bridge (2022): $325M drained

  • Euler Finance (2023): $197M flash loan attack

How to Protect Yourself?

  • Stick to battle-tested DEXs (Uniswap, PancakeSwap, Jupiter)

  • Never use a DEX that launched less than 6 months ago  

  • Check if the smart contract is audited (look for CertiK or Trail of Bits audit badges) 

  • Revoke token approvals after trading using tools 

  • Use a CEX for ordinary trades and swaps, don’t expose yourself to unnecessary risks and steps.

Risk 2: Impermanent Loss (For Liquidity Providers)

You might have seen the lucrative yield coming from DeFi by providing liquidity, but there’s a catch to that. Read this first.

What It Is: When you provide liquidity to a DEX pool (like ETH/USDC), you deposit both tokens. If ETH’s price changes significantly, you end up with more of the losing asset and less of the winning asset.

Real Scenario: You deposit 1 ETH ($3,000) + 3,000 USDC into a pool. ETH pumps to $6,000. Instead of having $6,000 worth of ETH, the AMM rebalances you to 0.707 ETH + 4,242 USDC = $8,485 total. Sounds good? Not quite. If you just held 1 ETH, you’d have $9,000 (1 ETH at $6,000 + 3,000 USDC). You lost $515 to impermanent loss.

Pro Tip: Only provide liquidity to stablecoin pairs (like USDC/USDT) if you’re a beginner. These have near zero impermanent loss because both assets stay at $1. The APY is lower (5-15%), but you’re not gambling on price movements.

Risk 3: Rug Pulls and Scam Tokens

Anyone can create a token and list it on a DEX in 10 minutes but that means there’s going to be millions of tokens with the same name. It’s important to vet the contract address.

Common Red Flags to Watch For: 

  • Liquidity is less than $10K (easy to manipulate) 

  • Creator owns 90%+ of the token supply 

  • Liquidity isn’t locked (developer can remove it anytime) 

  • Token has a „mint“ function (unlimited supply can be created)

How to Check Before Buying:

  1. Paste the token contract address into DexScreener

  2. Check ‘Top Holders’, if one wallet owns 50%+, RUN

  3. Check ‘Liquidity Locked’, should show a timelock for 6+ months

  4. Check ‘Audit Status’, should have at least one audit badge

  5. Check ‘Contract Verified’, should link to a blockchain explorer

How to Use DexScreener Like a Pro 

DexScreener is the Bloomberg Terminal of DEXs. It tracks every token across 50+ blockchains in real-time. Here’s how to use it correctly:

Feature 1: Multi-Chain Search

Search any token ticker (like ‘PEPE’) and DexScreener shows you:

  • Which DEXs list it

  • Price on each DEX (spot arbitrage opportunities)

  • Liquidity depth

  • 24H volume

  • Top holders

Pro Tip: If the same token shows different prices on Uniswap ($0.00001) vs PancakeSwap ($0.000012), there’s a 20% arbitrage gap. But factor in gas fees and slippage, often it’s not profitable unless you’re moving $50K+.

Feature 2: New Pairs Alert

Set alerts for new liquidity pools above $100K. This catches token launches before they pump 10x.

Please note: For every new token, there are many copycats and rugs. You need to check liquidity lock, holder distribution, and contract code before aping in.

Feature 3: Whale Wallet Tracking

Find a profitable trader on DexScreener → Click their wallet address → See every trade they’ve made. Copy their strategy.

Final Thoughts: DEXs Aren’t Replacing CEXs, They’re Complementing Them

DEXs are revolutionary for eliminating custodial risk and enabling permissionless trading. But they’re not a one-size-fits-all solution.

Each platform has its own perks and drawdowns, it’s best to adopt a combination of both rather than being a maximalist. Use DEXs for new token launches, privacy, and spot trading of unlisted altcoins. Use CEXs (like BitMEX) for leveraged trading, advanced orders, and customer support. Note that some CEX do incorporate DeFi features. 

Ready to start trading? BitMEX is giving away $5,000+ in Welcome Package rewards. More details here.

FAQs

Do I need KYC to use a DEX?

No. DEXs are permissionless. You just connect a wallet and trade. No email. No passport scan. No waiting 48 hours for account approval. 

Can I get my funds back if I send them to the wrong address?

A: No. Blockchain transactions are irreversible. If you send 10 ETH to the wrong address, it’s gone. This is why you always send a test transaction first.

Q: Why are Ethereum gas fees so high on DEXs?

A: Every DEX trade is a smart contract interaction, which requires computational power (gas). When Ethereum is congested, gas fees spike to $50-200 per swap. Solution: Use Layer 2 DEXs (like dYdX) or alternative chains (like Solana, BNB Chain).

Q: Can a DEX freeze my funds?

A: No—unless the token itself has a blacklist function. Uniswap, PancakeSwap, and dYdX cannot freeze your wallet. But some tokens (like USDC) have admin functions that can blacklist addresses.

Q: Is providing liquidity to a DEX worth it?

A: Only if you understand impermanent loss. Stick to stablecoin pairs (USDC/USDT) for safer yields. Avoid volatile pairs (ETH/SHIB) unless you’re an experienced LP.

​BitMEX Blog 

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