Coinbase has bagged an A+ rating from the Better Business Bureau, a major nod to its renewed efforts to clean up its act on customer service. The announcement came from CEO Brian Armstrong, who praised his customer experience team for what he called “tireless work.”
While the exchange has faced more than its share of backlash over the years—from delayed withdrawals to Base network hiccups—this marks a significant shift. The crypto giant seems to be doubling down on the one thing critics said it lacked: loyalty to the everyday user.
From Lawsuits to Loyalty: Coinbase Shifts Gears
Just two years ago, Coinbase was battling regulatory heat, unhappy users, and a faltering help desk. Fast forward to now, and it’s got the BBB’s gold star pinned to its chest.
Armstrong was quick to shine the spotlight on his customer support team. “This isn’t about fancy tech or new coins,” he said on X (formerly Twitter). “It’s about people. Real humans answering other real humans. That’s what changed.”
That’s saying something. Crypto exchanges aren’t known for warm, fuzzy service.
Even so, Coinbase, one of the few publicly listed crypto firms, has had to reinvent how it handles users. Complaints once flooded Reddit threads and Trustpilot pages. Refunds took weeks. Now, reports suggest replies within hours—and refunds in days, not weeks.
One user posted: “I submitted a support ticket on a Sunday and got a resolution by Monday afternoon. That’s unheard of in crypto.”
Armstrong’s Promise: “We’re Not Done Yet”
There’s something quietly defiant about Armstrong’s tone lately.
He’s been unusually vocal about the need for trust. “The rating’s nice,” he admitted. “But it doesn’t mean we stop.”
That’s probably wise. Crypto is a credibility game.
In recent months, Coinbase launched better help desk routing, rolled out live chat in more regions, and improved its Base network reliability. That last part’s big—users had been grumbling about failed Base transactions as recently as May.
Still, Armstrong says the journey’s far from over.
A short post on his personal blog read: “We’ll keep earning trust, one customer at a time.”
BBB Rating: What Does A+ Actually Mean?
So how does the Better Business Bureau actually rate companies?
It’s not just a vibe check. The BBB looks at:
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Complaint volume (and how they’re handled)
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Transparency of business practices
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Time taken to resolve issues
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Overall customer sentiment
The A+ grade sits at the top of the scale. It doesn’t mean a business is perfect, but it does show a track record of resolving issues fairly—and fast.
Here’s a quick table that breaks it down:
BBB Rating Scale | What It Indicates |
---|---|
A+ | Excellent resolution standards |
A – B | Good, some unresolved complaints |
C – D | Pattern of poor performance |
F | Unaddressed or ignored issues |
As of August, Coinbase now officially sits at the top.
Still Not Without Its Woes
Let’s not sugarcoat it—Coinbase still has critics.
Some traders say support is still patchy during peak volume surges. Others feel fees are too high, especially when compared to platforms like Binance or Kraken. And Base, Coinbase’s in-house Layer 2, has had uptime issues.
Even recently, Base was called out on X for transaction delays. A few users were locked out of smart contracts for hours. That’s no small thing in DeFi.
One Ethereum developer quipped, “Base is still a beta product wearing adult clothes.”
But Armstrong didn’t dodge these concerns. In an interview with Bloomberg Tech, he said: “Our systems aren’t flawless, and we know that. What we can promise is that someone will always be there to help.”
The Bigger Picture: Trust is the Real Token
Crypto isn’t just about coins anymore. It’s about trust.
The FTX collapse, Celsius fiasco, and dozens of smaller rug pulls have made users suspicious. Coinbase, being a U.S.-regulated, publicly traded company, already had some street cred. But it hadn’t always delivered on the customer care front.
Now, this BBB A+ score serves as a proof point. It’s symbolic, sure, but it’s also measurable progress. Customers notice.
“Honestly, I didn’t even care about ratings before,” said one Reddit user. “But after getting burned on two other exchanges, I’m only using Coinbase now. At least they answer.”
There’s a kind of back-to-basics feel to it all. Less hype, more help.
What’s Next? Hints at More Support Upgrades
Insiders say Coinbase is working on further upgrades. That includes rolling out 24/7 live agents in Europe and Australia, adding multilingual help, and embedding support directly into Base-integrated dApps.
There’s also chatter about integrating AI for faster first-response filtering. Not to replace humans, but to speed up how issues are routed.
And while Armstrong hasn’t confirmed it, there are whispers of Coinbase exploring a kind of “VIP lane” for high-volume traders. Think concierge-style support for power users.
Still, the message remains the same: The user’s voice matters.
Coinbase is betting that in a post-FTX world, customer service might just be the killer app.