Pros and cons
Pros 4
- 14+ year operational track record with no exchange-level hack
- Bi-annual proof-of-reserves audits by a third-party accountancy firm with an open-source Merkle verification tool
- SEC unregistered-exchange case dismissed in March 2025
- 600+ assets, Lightning Network supported, regulated EU subsidiary
Cons 4
- Full mandatory KYC from the first dollar — no anonymous tier
- Custodial model: users do not hold private keys
- Monero delisted in the EEA (October 2024) under MiCA pressure
- Cooperates with law-enforcement subpoenas and chain-analysis tooling
At a glance 7/7
Full review
Kraken is one of the oldest and most established US cryptocurrency exchanges, founded in 2011 by Jesse Powell in San Francisco. It offers spot, margin, and futures trading across 600+ assets, operates a regulated subsidiary in Europe, and has built a reputation for transparency through regular proof-of-reserves audits. On NoKYCList, Kraken appears only as a comparison baseline — mandatory government-ID verification is required for every account, so it represents the opposite of what no-KYC users seek.
How it works
Users create an account with email and password, then must complete identity verification before depositing or trading. Kraken operates four verification tiers — Starter, Express (US-only), Intermediate, and Pro — each unlocking higher withdrawal limits and feature access. Even the entry-level Starter tier requires full name, date of birth, address, and government-issued ID. Fiat deposits via wire, ACH, or SEPA additionally require bank account verification. Once verified, users can trade on the standard web interface, Kraken Pro (advanced order types), or via REST/WebSocket API. Lightning Network deposits and withdrawals for Bitcoin have been supported since April 2023.
KYC & privacy
Kraken collects a full dossier during onboarding: legal name, date of birth, residential address, nationality, government ID (passport, driver's licence, or national ID card), proof of address dated within 90 days, a live selfie or short video, and in some cases source-of-funds documentation for the Pro tier. Data is retained under US and EU record-keeping laws, shared with FinCEN, IRS, and foreign regulators on valid request, and subject to automated chain-analysis tooling. There is no anonymous tier, no .onion mirror, and no option to opt out of verification.
Strengths and limits
Kraken's core strengths are regulatory standing and operational track record: 14+ years without a catastrophic exchange hack, proof-of-reserves reports every six months attested by a third-party accountancy firm, and an open-source Merkle-tree verification tool that lets each client confirm their own balances were included in the audit. The SEC's unregistered-exchange lawsuit was dismissed in March 2025, removing that overhang. Limits, from a privacy standpoint, are severe: full KYC applies from the first dollar, Monero was delisted in the EEA in October 2024 under MiCA pressure, and the exchange cooperates with subpoenas and sanctions lists. Custody is centralized — users do not hold private keys.
Verdict
Kraken earns a NoKYCList score of 4.8/10: strong on custody transparency and operational history, but mandatory KYC (L5) caps its relevance for privacy-focused users. It is included here as a comparison baseline against the no-KYC, trustless, and P2P alternatives catalogued across the rest of the directory. Choose Kraken when regulatory clarity and fiat rails matter more than privacy; choose a no-signup or non-custodial alternative otherwise.
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