Crypto exchange fees are charges for buying, selling, or trading cryptocurrencies, covering security, maintenance, and development costs.
Charged per transaction for buying, selling, or swapping cryptocurrencies. Includes maker and taker fees, where makers pay lower fees and takers pay higher fees.
A fixed percentage fee, ranging from 0.1% to 1%, applied to each trade regardless of the order type or services provided by the platform.
The difference between the buy and sell prices of a cryptocurrency. Exchanges profit from the spread instead of charging direct commission.
Charged when adding or withdrawing funds. Deposits are often free, but withdrawals may have fixed or variable fees based on the network.
Fees charged by exchanges for staking services, where users lock up their cryptocurrency to support blockchain operations and earn rewards.
Fees for processing blockchain transactions, paid to miners. These vary based on network demand and usage.
Exchanges charge these on accounts inactive for a specified period, deducting from the user's balance to encourage regular activity.
Fees for borrowing funds to trade on margin. These fees can be a fixed percentage or based on the amount borrowed and loan duration.
Periodic payments between long and short traders in perpetual futures contracts to maintain prices close to the asset’s spot price.