Walk into Coinhub’s new Las Vegas location, and you will find something unusual: actual people ready to help you buy, sell, or trade Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. This week, Coinhub Exchange launched its first physical branches with in-person tellers and personalized service—an innovative step in an industry that has long prioritized online and self-service transactions.
The walk-in locations were opened in Las Vegas and Phoenix. The branches combine traditional online cryptocurrency trading with personalized customer service, targeting newcomers who find apps confusing as well as serious traders who are moving significant amounts of money.
Real Help, Real Fast
Staff at both locations will walk customers through account setup, explain how to wire money or deposit crypto, and show them how to make their first trade without the usual panic. Each branch has ATMs in the lobby, and tellers handle the cash there.
This hands-on approach matters when one is dealing with huge stakes. Verified customers at Coinhub Bitcoin ATMs can move up to $50,000 in cash daily, far exceeding the limits that one will typically encounter at a standard corner-store Bitcoin ATM. Coinhub emphasizes competitive fees and displays prices transparently on-screen at the ATM for review before you confirm the transaction, with no hidden surprises buried in fine print.
In the U.S. alone, Coinhub’s network includes 2,000+ Bitcoin ATM locations nationwide, letting people easily buy and sell crypto with cash.
Trading Options for Everyone
The platform splits into five paths depending on what you need. Quick Trading strips out the confusing charts for people just starting out. Pro Trader gives experienced users the technical tools and lower fees they are hunting for. There’s over-the-counter service for bulk orders, credit card buys for convenience, and cash options through either branch staff or Coinhub’s network of ATMs.
This push into physical retail says something about where crypto’s headed. As regulations tighten and more regular folks wade in, exchanges can’t just compete on which coins they list or how low their fees go. Other platforms will be watching closely. If customers show up and Coinhub’s branches work, expect competitors to start scouting real estate.