1. Trading Fees

Fees charged when you buy/sell crypto assets on an exchange.

Maker Fee: When you create an order that does not immediately match (e.g., limit order). Usually cheaper.

Taker Fee: When you take liquidity from the order book (e.g., market order). Usually more expensive.

> ๐Ÿ’ก Example: Binance charges a 0.1% fee for maker/taker, which can be cheaper if you pay with BNB.

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2. Network Fees / Gas Fees

Fees paid to the blockchain network to process transactions.

Example of network fees:

Blockchain Average Fee Caused By

Ethereum High (can be tens of $) Contract complexity & network congestion

Bitcoin Medium Transaction size & network traffic

Solana Low (cents < $0.01) Blockchain design efficiency

Polygon Low Layer 2 of Ethereum

> ๐Ÿ› ๏ธ These fees are paid in the native coin of the respective network (ETH, BTC, SOL, etc.).

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3. Withdrawal Fees

Fees charged by the exchange when you send crypto to a personal wallet.

Can be flat or network-based.

Example: Binance may charge 0.0005 BTC for Bitcoin withdrawal.

> โš ๏ธ Fees can vary greatly depending on the chosen network (e.g., USDT on ERC-20 vs TRC-20 vs BEP-20).

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4. Swap Fees

When you swap tokens on a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) like Uniswap or PancakeSwap.

There is a fee for liquidity providers (usually 0.3%)

Plus network gas fee

> ๐Ÿ”„ Swapping on cheap networks (like Arbitrum, Polygon) can save costs.

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5. Staking Fees

If you stake on third-party platforms (like Lido or exchanges), they may take a cut from your rewards.

Example: Lido takes ~10% from your ETH rewards.

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6. Hidden Fees

Slippage: The difference between the order price and the execution price.

Price Markup: On some swap platforms, the token price may be marked up behind the scenes.

Spread: The difference between the buy and sell price on exchanges (especially on smaller exchanges).

#CryptoFees101