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Mantapex
Bitstamp
Bitstamp
Luxembourg
CoinGecko Trust 9/10·#12 rank·11.1K BTC vol 24h·Luxembourg·Est. 2011

Connect Bitstamp

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About Bitstamp

Bitstamp is the world's longest-running cryptocurrency exchange, providing a secure platform for trading popular cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum with a focus on transparency and customer service.

Editorial summary aggregated from CoinGecko and CoinMarketCap exchange profiles for Bitstamp, an exchange operating since 2011.

Bitstamp at a Glance

Key facts about Bitstamp compiled from verified market data and CoinGecko's exchange registry. These metrics help you evaluate liquidity, regulatory footprint and operational maturity before connecting a portfolio.

Trust Score
9/10
Rank #12
24h Volume (normalized)
11.1K BTC
Active markets
100 pairs
Available in
1 jurisdictions
Luxembourg
Operating since
2011
15 years
Trading incentives
Not offered
CCXT integration
Supported
bitstamp
Data source
CoinGecko exchange registry

Trading access & integration

Bitstamp is wired into Mantapex through the CCXT integration layer, so importing balances and trade history into a read-only portfolio requires an API key and a secret that you generate inside your own Bitstamp account. Because Mantapex never custodies your funds, the keys you create should be scoped to read access only — withdrawal, transfer and trading permissions are unnecessary for portfolio tracking and should remain disabled. The trust score and rank shown in the Quick Facts above are sourced from CoinGecko's exchange framework, which blends reported liquidity, web traffic patterns, regulatory posture and API health into a single signal — useful when comparing Bitstamp to peer venues, but never a substitute for your own due diligence. The headquarters jurisdiction shown above determines the regulatory framework, KYC tier and product mix Bitstamp can offer a given user, and that scope can change as licensing evolves. Verify eligibility and the local terms of service on the official site before opening an account. The operating history reflected above means there is a comparatively deep public trail of incidents, audits, fee schedules and product launches you can review when sizing Bitstamp against newer venues.

CCXT-compatible API key required API secret required Setup guide available

Connection metadata is read directly from Mantapex's CCXT integration manifest — credential requirements reflect what Bitstamp itself exposes to read-only API consumers and may evolve as the venue updates its API.

Getting Started with Bitstamp

Log In to Your Bitstamp Account

  • Navigate to Bitstamp and sign in with your credentials.​

Access the API Management Section

  • Click on your profile icon located at the top-right corner and select "Settings".
  • In the left-hand menu, click on "API access".​

Create a New API Key

  • Click on the "New API Key" button.​

Set Permissions to Read-Only

  • In the permissions section, enable only the following under General permissions:
    • Account balance
    • User transactions
  • Ensure that permissions related to trading, withdrawals, deposits, and orders are not selected. ​

Complete Security Verification

  • Enter your Two-Factor Authentication (2FA) code to confirm the creation of the API key.​

Activate the API Key

  • After creation, you'll receive an email to activate your new API key. Follow the instructions in the email to complete the activation process.

Securely Store Your API Credentials

  • Your API Key and Secret Key will be displayed.
  • Important: Make sure to securely save both keys, as the secret key will not be displayed again.

LEARN MORE

Required Credentials: API Key Secret Key

Account, custody & security on Bitstamp

Bitstamp operates as a custodial trading venue: when you fund an account, the deposited assets are held in wallets controlled by the exchange and credited to your balance as a book-entry until you withdraw them. That trade-off — convenience and order-book liquidity in exchange for counterparty risk — is the central design choice of every centralised exchange and is what makes platform-level security so important to evaluate. Bitstamp has been running its custody and matching infrastructure since 2011, which gives it 15 years of operational track record for users to review when judging incident history, fund-recovery policy and any insurance or reserve-fund coverage.

Almost every major centralised exchange — including Bitstamp — operates under some form of KYC ("Know Your Customer") and AML ("Anti-Money-Laundering") obligations imposed by the jurisdiction it serves. Bitstamp is reported with its operating entity in Luxembourg, so its baseline KYC programme follows that jurisdiction's rules — additional verification may still be requested for higher-tier withdrawal or fiat-on-ramp limits, and access to specific products can be restricted depending on where the user resides. Expect to provide a government-issued ID document and a recent proof-of-address at minimum; higher verification tiers may add liveness checks, source-of-funds questionnaires and accredited-investor confirmations.

Enable two-factor authentication on the Bitstamp account itself before generating any API keys. The strongest options are hardware security keys (FIDO2 / WebAuthn devices such as YubiKey or Solo) where supported, followed by an authenticator app on a dedicated device (Aegis, Raivo, 1Password, Authy in offline-only mode, or Google Authenticator). SMS-based 2FA is widely available but is the weakest of the common methods because of SIM-swap risk — if Bitstamp only offers SMS, treat the account as more exposed and consider keeping balances on the venue smaller than you otherwise would. The 2FA factor should be different from anything you use to sign in elsewhere, and the recovery phrase or backup codes belong in offline cold storage, not in the same password manager you use to log in.

Use Bitstamp's withdrawal-address whitelist if the feature is available. Whitelists turn a stolen API key or hijacked session into a much smaller blast radius: even with full account access, an attacker cannot send funds to an address that wasn't pre-approved and cleared a cool-down window. Combine this with anti-phishing codes (a short string that the exchange embeds in every legitimate email), a separate email account that's not used for anything else, and notification alerts for new logins, withdrawal requests and API-key creation. The same hygiene applies whether you actively trade or simply hold a long-term balance on Bitstamp — most exchange-related losses originate from compromised individual accounts rather than platform-wide breaches.

For the specific case of connecting Bitstamp to Mantapex, the additional hardening layer is straightforward: generate a dedicated API key for read-only portfolio sync, label it clearly (for example "Mantapex read-only sync"), disable every permission except the minimum the exchange exposes for balance and trade-history queries, and store the secret in a password manager so you can rotate it on a schedule. If Bitstamp supports IP whitelisting and you connect from a stable address, restrict the key to that address. If you ever stop using Mantapex — or any other third-party dashboard — revoke the key on the exchange side rather than just deleting it from the dashboard, because the credential continues to authenticate against Bitstamp's API until Bitstamp itself invalidates it.

Security guidance on this page is generic exchange hardening that applies to every centralised crypto venue. For Bitstamp's exchange-specific policies — fund-segregation model, proof-of-reserves cadence, insurance coverage and incident-response history — the canonical references are Bitstamp's own Help Centre and any audit reports or attestations the venue publishes directly.

API access details for Bitstamp

Connecting Bitstamp as a read-only portfolio source on Mantapex relies on the credentials defined by Bitstamp's own API. The matrix below mirrors exactly what the CCXT integration layer asks for — ticked rows mean the field is required to authenticate, untouched rows mean Bitstamp doesn't ask for that field at all.

API key
Public identifier that pairs your read-only access with your exchange account.
API secret
Private signing string used to authenticate each request — never share it.
API passphrase
Additional passphrase set when the key is created (KuCoin, OKX-style models).
Account UID
Numeric account identifier that some venues require alongside the API key.
Sub-account ID
Used when the venue scopes API access to a specific sub-account.
Login name
A separate username distinct from email, used by a small number of CCXT-supported venues.
TOTP / 2FA secret
Time-based one-time-password seed for endpoints that demand a fresh 2FA code.
Wallet private key
Self-custody signing key — required only by DEX / on-chain integrations.
Wallet address
On-chain address tied to the private key for DEX-style integrations.
Bearer token
OAuth-style bearer token, occasionally used in place of an HMAC API key pair.

In short, Bitstamp requires 2 credentials to authenticate API requests: API key and API secret. All of these are generated from inside the exchange's own dashboard — Mantapex never asks you to share your account password or to set up an API key with withdrawal permissions enabled.

When you create the key on Bitstamp for use with Mantapex, restrict its permissions to read-only access (sometimes labelled "view", "read", "query" or "info"). Mantapex only needs to fetch balances, trade history and open positions. Withdrawal, trade-execution and transfer scopes should remain disabled. If Bitstamp offers a granular permission model, the safest combination is: enable "Read" or "View", disable "Trade" or "Spot trade", disable "Withdraw" or "Universal Transfer", and leave any margin / futures permission switched off unless you specifically want those positions visible inside your portfolio dashboard.

Some exchanges — Binance, OKX, Bybit, Bitget, KuCoin and several Asia-Pacific venues — offer an optional IP whitelist when you create the API key. Leaving the whitelist empty lets the key authenticate from any address, which is the simplest setup for use with a cloud-hosted dashboard such as Mantapex. If Bitstamp forces you to enter at least one IP and you don't have a static address, you can usually use a placeholder value the exchange recognises (for example "0.0.0.0/0" or the wildcard option) — consult Bitstamp's API documentation before relying on that workaround. Either way, the credentials remain in a read-only scope and cannot be used to move funds off the venue.

Credential schema sourced directly from the CCXT integration manifest used by Mantapex. Bitstamp may rotate or extend its API in the future — if the exchange asks for a credential not listed here when you create the key, you can safely ignore it for the purpose of a read-only Mantapex import.

Official resources & community for Bitstamp

The links below point to first-party Bitstamp properties. We track them so you can verify announcements, support channels and operator-published policies directly at the source rather than from third-party copies. External destinations open in a new tab and are marked nofollow per our resource-link policy.

Related exchanges & comparisons

Peer sets sourced from CoinGecko's trust-score ranking and CCXT's exchange manifest. Inclusion here is not an endorsement — it simply means Mantapex tracks the venue with current trust / volume data.

Recent Bitstamp news

Latest reporting from major crypto news outlets covering Bitstamp.

Data Disclaimer

Exchange data is sourced from third-party providers and may not reflect real-time conditions.

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