AT A GLANCE

Coinbase
Robinhood
2012
Founded
2013
Remote (no HQ)
HQ
Menlo Park, California
$547 Million
Total Raised
$5.6 Billion
Brian Armstrong
Founder
Vlad Tenev & Baiju Bhatt
Crypto
Type
Fintech
Public (NASDAQ: COIN)
Status
Public (NASDAQ: HOOD)

FUNDING HISTORY

Coinbase

Seed (Y Combinator)2012
$600,000 raised$5M val.
Series B2013
$25M raised$143M val.
Series C2015
$75M raised$500M val.
Series D2017
$100M raised$1.6B val.
Series E2018
$300M raised$8.0B val.
Direct Listing (NASDAQ: COIN)2021
$0 raised$85.8B val.

Robinhood

Seed2013
$3M raised$15M val.
Series A2014
$13M raised$60M val.
Series B2015
$50M raised$250M val.
Series C2017
$110M raised$1.3B val.
Series D2018
$363M raised$5.6B val.
Series F/G2020
$800M raised$11.2B val.
Emergency Raise + IPO2021
$3.4B raised$32.0B val.

BUSINESS MODEL

Coinbase

Coinbase makes money from transaction fees. Every time someone buys or sells crypto on the platform, Coinbase takes a cut — typically around 1.5% for regular users, lower for high-volume traders on Coinbase Pro.

For a company that processes billions in daily volume, that adds up fast. In the 2021 bull run, Coinbase generated $7.8 billion in revenue.

Beyond trading fees, Coinbase earns revenue from staking (users earn yield on their crypto, Coinbase takes a commission), USDC interest (Coinbase co-created the USDC stablecoin with Circle and earns interest on the reserves), custodial services for institutions, and its cloud platform for developers building on-chain apps.

Robinhood

Robinhood makes money in ways that don't involve charging users directly. The biggest revenue source is payment for order flow (PFOF) — when users place a trade, Robinhood routes it to market makers like Citadel Securities, who pay Robinhood for the right to execute the trade.

This generates hundreds of millions annually. Robinhood also earns interest on uninvested cash sitting in user accounts, margin lending (charging interest when users borrow money to trade), and Robinhood Gold — a $5/month subscription for larger instant deposits, professional research, and higher interest on cash.

HOW THEY STARTED

Coinbase

Brian Armstrong was working as a software engineer at Airbnb in 2010 when he read Satoshi Nakamoto's Bitcoin white paper. He became obsessed.

At the time, buying Bitcoin meant navigating sketchy exchanges, wiring money to anonymous accounts, and hoping your coins didn't get stolen. Armstrong thought: this is never going mainstream unless someone makes it dead simple.

In 2012, Armstrong got into Y Combinator and co-founded Coinbase with Fred Ehrsam, a former Goldman Sachs trader. Their pitch was straightforward — be the easiest, safest, most regulated way to buy and sell Bitcoin.

While other crypto exchanges were operating in legal gray areas, Coinbase went out of its way to get money transmitter licenses in every US state. It was slow and expensive, but it meant Coinbase was the one exchange your bank wouldn't block.

The first version was bare-bones. You linked your bank account, bought Bitcoin, and Coinbase held it for you.

That custody model — Coinbase holding your crypto — was controversial with crypto purists who preached "not your keys, not your coins." But for normal people who didn't want to manage private keys, it was exactly what they needed.

Robinhood

Vlad Tenev and Baiju Bhatt met as physics and math students at Stanford. After graduating, they moved to New York and started two fintech companies that sold trading software to hedge funds.

While building tools for Wall Street, they noticed something absurd: it cost brokerages essentially nothing to execute a trade electronically, but they were charging retail investors $7-10 per trade.

The math was simple. Electronic trading had driven costs to near zero, but brokerages kept the old pricing because customers didn't know better.

Tenev and Bhatt thought: what if we just charged zero? In 2013, they founded Robinhood with the explicit mission of democratizing finance — giving everyone access to the stock market with no commissions, no minimums, and a beautiful mobile app.

The app launched in 2014 with a waitlist that hit 1 million people before the product was even available. The pink-and-green design, the confetti animation when you made a trade, and the simplicity of the interface made investing feel approachable.

For millions of young Americans who had never bought a stock, Robinhood was the entry point.

HOW THEY GREW

Coinbase

Coinbase grew with the Bitcoin price cycle. Every bull run brought a wave of new users who heard about crypto from the news or their friends and Googled "how to buy Bitcoin." Coinbase was almost always the first result.

The company spent heavily on brand advertising including a legendary Super Bowl ad in 2022 that was just a bouncing QR code — it crashed the app from the traffic surge.

The regulatory strategy was the long game. While Binance and FTX grew faster by ignoring regulations, Coinbase spent years and millions getting licensed.

When the regulatory crackdown came, Coinbase was the last exchange standing. Being "the regulated one" went from a competitive disadvantage to the only thing that mattered.

The direct listing in April 2021 was a landmark moment. Coinbase went public via direct listing at a $85 billion valuation — the largest direct listing in history at the time.

It legitimized crypto as an asset class in a way that no Bitcoin price chart ever could.

Robinhood

Robinhood grew by making investing feel like a game. The app was designed to be addictive — swipe to trade, confetti for your first purchase, notifications about stock movements.

It was investing designed for the smartphone generation. Critics called it "gamification of finance." Users called it the first trading app that didn't feel like it was designed in 1997.

The referral program was massive. Both the referer and the new user got a free stock when someone signed up.

People were getting free shares of Apple or Ford just for downloading the app. It spread through college campuses like wildfire.

By 2020, the average Robinhood user was 31 years old — decades younger than the average brokerage customer.

Zero commissions forced the entire industry to follow. In October 2019, Charles Schwab, TD Ameritrade, E-Trade, and Fidelity all dropped their trading commissions to zero within days of each other.

Robinhood had single-handedly destroyed the commission-based brokerage model that had existed for decades.

THE HARD PART

Coinbase

The crypto winter of 2022 nearly broke the company. After the collapse of FTX, Luna, and Three Arrows Capital, crypto trading volume fell off a cliff.

Coinbase's revenue dropped from $7.8 billion in 2021 to $3.1 billion in 2022. The stock went from $342 to $35 — an 90% decline.

Armstrong laid off 18% of the company in June 2022 and another 20% in January 2023.

The SEC lawsuit was existential. In June 2023, the SEC sued Coinbase alleging that it operated as an unregistered securities exchange.

The lawsuit claimed that at least 13 crypto assets traded on Coinbase were securities. If the SEC won, it could have fundamentally broken Coinbase's business model.

The case was eventually settled in 2025 with Coinbase paying a $50 million fine but crucially not admitting that any tokens were securities.

Revenue concentration is a structural risk. Coinbase's revenue swings wildly with crypto prices and trading volume.

In bull markets, the company prints money. In bear markets, revenue evaporates.

This makes it nearly impossible to plan long-term or maintain consistent growth — Wall Street hates unpredictability.

Robinhood

GameStop was the worst week in Robinhood's history. In January 2021, Reddit's r/WallStreetBets community drove GameStop stock from $20 to $483.

Millions of Robinhood users were buying. Then on January 28, Robinhood restricted buying of GameStop and several other meme stocks.

Users could only sell, not buy. The stock crashed.

The backlash was nuclear. Users accused Robinhood of siding with hedge funds against retail investors.

Vlad Tenev was dragged before Congress. The real reason was less sinister but equally damaging — Robinhood's clearinghouse (DTCC) demanded $3 billion in additional collateral due to the extreme volatility, and Robinhood didn't have it.

They had to raise $3.4 billion in emergency funding over a weekend. The company that built its brand on democratizing finance had restricted the most democratic stock trade in history.

The payment for order flow controversy never goes away. Critics argue that PFOF creates a conflict of interest — Robinhood profits by routing user trades to market makers rather than getting users the best possible price.

The SEC has considered banning PFOF entirely. If that happens, Robinhood loses its largest revenue source.

Post-IPO performance was brutal. Robinhood went public in July 2021 at $38 per share.

The stock briefly hit $70 on meme stock momentum, then cratered to under $8 by mid-2022 — a 90% decline. The company laid off 23% of staff in April 2022 and another 23% in August 2022.

THE PRODUCTS

Coinbase

Coinbase is the consumer trading platform — buy, sell, and hold 250+ cryptocurrencies. Coinbase Advanced Trade (formerly Coinbase Pro) is the lower-fee, more sophisticated trading interface.

Coinbase Wallet is a self-custody wallet where users control their own keys. Coinbase Prime is the institutional platform for hedge funds, family offices, and corporations.

Base is Coinbase's own Layer 2 blockchain built on Ethereum, designed for cheap, fast transactions. USDC is the stablecoin Coinbase co-created with Circle — pegged 1:1 to the US dollar with over $30 billion in circulation.

Coinbase Commerce lets businesses accept crypto payments.

Robinhood

Robinhood is a stock, options, and crypto trading app. The core product lets you buy and sell stocks, ETFs, and options with zero commissions.

Robinhood Crypto adds trading for Bitcoin, Ethereum, and other cryptocurrencies. Robinhood Gold is the premium tier — higher interest on cash, larger instant deposits, and Morningstar research reports.

Robinhood Cash Card is a debit card that earns cashback and rounds up purchases to invest spare change. Robinhood Retirement offers IRA accounts with a 1% match on contributions.

Robinhood Legend is their new desktop trading platform aimed at active traders.

WHO BACKED THEM

Coinbase

Y Combinator, Andreessen Horowitz, Union Square Ventures, Tiger Global, Ribbit Capital, IVP

Robinhood

Sequoia Capital, Ribbit Capital, NEA, Index Ventures, Andreessen Horowitz, DST Global, D1 Capital

MORE COMPARISONS

Coinbase vs Robinhood — Head-to-Head Comparison | Netfigo