#CryptoFees101

🔥 If you use Binance and don't fully understand how they charge you fees, they are taking your money without you realizing it.

This is not FUD. It's #Cryptofees101 in Spanish, explained like nobody else does (and with data updated to JUNE 2025)👇

💸 1. Every time you make a trade on Binance, you pay a base fee of 0.1%

But here's the trick: if you make 50 trades a month of $100, you're giving away $5… and most people don't even notice.

💳 2. If you pay the fees with BNB, it reduces to 0.075%.

The difference is small in smaller numbers, but when you move $1,000 or $10,000, every decimal counts.

👉 Pro tip: Activate fee payments with BNB in settings and you save automatically.

📉 3. Do you do spot or futures? There's a silent trap: the "maker" and "taker" fees.

Maker: from 0.1% (if you place an order that doesn't execute immediately).

Taker: up to 0.2% (if you take liquidity from the market).

What's the difference? Binance rewards you for being "patient".

⚠️ If you only do market orders, you're overpaying every time.

📊 4. And the VIPs?

Few people know this: if you exceed $1 million in monthly volume or have more than 25 BNB in your account, your fees drop by up to 80%.

You don't have to be a whale. If you're serious about trading, level up and Binance charges you less.

🚀 5. The "hidden fees" that no one mentions:

When you do "convert" instead of trading (using the quick convert button), Binance doesn't show you a direct fee…

But it applies an internal spread (the difference between the real market price and the one they give you).

It's not much… but if you do that several times a month, you're losing more than if you paid normal fees.

🧠 Real conclusion: It's not about how much you earn… but how much you let them take without you realizing it.

If you understand this, you can save between $100 and $1,000 a year (depending on your volume). I've already checked my settings and adjusted EVERYTHING.

💥 And you? Do you want to keep giving away money or start playing like those who win seriously?