Day trading crypto vs stocks looks like the same job from a distance: stare at charts, manage risk, take setups. Up close it is two different professions. Hours, volatility, leverage, regulation, and tax all differ enough that a strategy paying you in equities can lose money in crypto, and vice versa. The five differences below are the ones that actually change behaviour on the desk.
Difference 1: when the market is open
Stocks trade roughly 6.5 hours a day, 5 days a week, with a fixed open and close. The session has structure: opening volatility, midday lull, closing auction. Strategies anchor to those rhythms.
Crypto trades 24/7. There is no open and no close. Volume clusters in three windows (Asia open, London open, US open) but the market never sleeps. The implications:
- Crypto traders need a hard schedule discipline. Without one, screen time creeps to 14+ hours and execution quality collapses.
- Crypto positions carry overnight gap risk every night, including weekends.
- Stock traders get 17.5 hours a day off, by design. Crypto traders have to take it deliberately.
Difference 2: how much it actually moves
Realised volatility, annualised, in 2026:
- SP 500: 12-18%.
- Median SP 500 single-name stock: 25-35%.
- High-vol single names (small-cap, biotech, recent IPOs): 50-90%.
- Bitcoin: 45-55%.
- Ether: 55-70%.
- Top-20 alts: 70-120%.
The practical effect: a 1% intraday move is normal in stocks, big in indices, and small in crypto majors. Stop placements scale accordingly. A trader bringing equity-style 0.5% stops to BTC will be stopped out by routine noise.
Difference 3: leverage caps and the regulatory frame
Under ESMA in the EEA:
- Major equity indices (SP 500, DAX, Euro Stoxx 50): 1:20 retail.
- Single-name equities: 1:5 retail.
- Cryptoassets: 1:2 retail.
Cash equities trading via a securities broker has its own rules: PDT in the US ($25k floor for 4+ day trades in 5 days), Reg T margin in the US, MiFID II suitability checks in the EEA. CFD frameworks share leverage caps but bypass PDT. Crypto sits in its own bucket: low leverage, broad access.
Difference 4: the cost structure
Round-trip costs differ in shape, not just size:
- Stocks via a major broker: zero commission on US equities, payment-for-order-flow embedded in the spread, plus regulatory fees on sells. Effective cost is 1-3 bp on liquid names.
- Stock CFDs: spread + commission, typically 5-15 bp round-trip.
- Crypto on a centralised exchange: 0.1-0.5% per side, plus withdrawal fees. 20-100 bp round-trip.
- Crypto CFDs: spread-only on most retail platforms, 5-15 bp round-trip on majors.
For active day traders the CFD path is competitive on cost in both markets. The catch is the leverage cap and the underlying not actually settling.
Difference 5: tax and reporting
Stocks have decades of clean tax infrastructure. Brokers issue annual statements. Wash-sale rules, holding-period treatment, and capital-gains brackets are well-defined.
Crypto tax in 2026 is more variable across jurisdictions. Spot trades, perpetual P&L, funding rate income, and CFD gains may each be treated differently. Self-custody adds the burden of tracking on-chain movements. CFD-reference exposure (single broker statement) simplifies reporting compared to multi-exchange spot trading. Always consult a local tax advisor.
Which one is easier for retail?
An honest take from desk experience:
- Crypto is more accessible: lower account minimums, no PDT, 24/7 hours so working professionals can trade.
- Stocks have cleaner structure: defined sessions, deeper liquidity in any given second, more reliable patterns.
- Crypto rewards volatility tolerance: strategies that ride 5-10% intraday swings work in crypto and would never trigger in equities.
- Stocks reward fundamental research: earnings, guidance, and macro flow create durable edges that crypto only partly replicates.
Can the same strategy work in both?
Some yes, some no. Trend-following on the daily timeframe travels well. Momentum breakouts travel with adjusted thresholds. Mean reversion on overbought conditions works in both. Strategies that depend on equity-specific structure (opening auction, closing auction, earnings drift) do not translate. Strategies that depend on crypto-specific structure (funding rate, exchange-listing flows, weekend thinness) do not translate the other way.
Day trading both at Volity
Volity offers CFD exposure to 20+ cryptocurrencies, major equity indices, individual equities, forex, and commodities through MT4 and MT5. Retail leverage caps under ESMA: 1:30 majors FX, 1:20 major indices, 1:10 commodities, 1:5 equities, 1:2 cryptoassets. Negative balance protection applies. Execution is by UBK Markets Ltd (CySEC 186/12).
About Volity
Volity is your all-in-one hub for money movement, market access, and financial clarity. Trading is executed by UBK Markets Ltd, a Cyprus Investment Firm authorised by CySEC under licence 186/12.
Risk disclosure
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. Between 70% and 80% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs.





