Understanding the True Cost of Crypto Trading
Crypto exchange fees are rarely as simple as the headline maker/taker rates suggest. The true cost of trading on any platform includes: spot trading fees (maker/taker structure), derivatives trading fees (perpetual swaps, futures, options), withdrawal fees by asset and network, deposit fees (most exchanges offer free deposits but some charge), spread on simple buy/sell interfaces (often 0.5–2% above market price), and staking or lending fee structures if applicable.
This comparison covers the total fee structure across the major exchanges for 2026.
Spot Trading Fee Comparison
Binance: 0.1%/0.1% (up to 0.02%/0.04% with BNB discount and volume). Bybit: 0.1%/0.1% (0.0%/0.06% at top tier). OKX: 0.08%/0.1% (0.02%/0.05% at top tier). Kraken: 0.16%/0.26% (0.00%/0.10% at top tier). Coinbase Advanced: 0.4%/0.6% (0.0%/0.05% at top tier). Gemini Active: 0.2%/0.4% (0.0%/0.1% at top tier).
Derivatives Fee Comparison
For perpetual swap trading, the most competitive fees are found at Bybit (0.01%/0.06%), OKX (0.02%/0.05%), and Binance (0.02%/0.04% with BNB discount). Kraken Futures and CME Group products carry higher fees appropriate for regulated institutional venues.
Withdrawal Fee Considerations
Withdrawal fees vary by network and asset. For USDT, choosing TRC-20 (Tron network) typically costs $1–2 versus ERC-20 (Ethereum network) at $5–25 depending on gas conditions. Bitcoin withdrawal fees range from $0.5–3 depending on exchange. Understanding network fee options at withdrawal significantly impacts the total cost of using any platform.
The Lowest-Fee Exchanges Overall
For active spot traders: Binance and OKX consistently offer the lowest blended fees. For derivatives traders: Bybit and OKX. For regulated, compliant trading with higher fees: Coinbase and Gemini. The right choice depends on your trading frequency — high-volume active traders should optimise aggressively for fees; infrequent investors may prioritise other factors.