Binance Fee Calculator Guide
A simple way to estimate trading commissions before placing an order.
The core formula
The basic estimate is simple: trade value multiplied by the fee rate. For example, a 10000 USDT trade at 0.100% costs 10 USDT before any discount. The same trade at 0.07500% costs 7.5 USDT with the regular-user BNB spot deduction.
This is why traders like fee calculators. They turn abstract percentages into real expected cost.
Inputs that matter
A useful Binance fee calculator needs the product type, maker or taker role, trade size, account tier, and whether any fee deduction such as BNB is active.
For futures, traders may also want to model repeated entries and exits because the total fee burden grows with every fill.
Example scenarios
Spot example: 5000 USDT notional at 0.100% costs 5 USDT. With a 25% BNB deduction on spot, the same notional costs 3.75 USDT.
Futures example: if a guide uses 0.02% maker and 0.05% taker as sample rates, 5000 USDT notional would imply 1 USDT maker cost or 2.5 USDT taker cost per side before other factors.
Why estimates should stay conservative
A calculator cannot fully predict slippage or missed fills. Use it to plan commissions, then add a safety margin for spread and execution quality.
That produces a more realistic break-even threshold than fee percentage alone.
Frequently asked questions
What is the basic fee formula?
Trade value multiplied by the applicable fee rate.
Why include maker or taker as an input?
Because the rate and execution behavior can differ meaningfully between the two.
Should a calculator include slippage?
Yes if possible, because real execution cost is broader than the fee line.
Related guides
Use the pages below to go deeper into spot fees, futures fees, BNB deductions, VIP tiers, post-only execution, and simple fee estimation.


