Exchange fee comparison
Same total trade volume using editable exchange presets.
Trading cost analyzer
Calculate trading fees, hidden costs, and real profit after fees across top crypto exchanges.
Understand exactly how much exchanges take from your trades.
1. Configure your trade
Formula: trade size per order × filled orders × fee/spread rate + flat withdrawal and network costs. Presets were checked against public fee pages on Apr 30, 2026, but remain editable estimates.
10 filled orders × $1,000.00 = $10,000.00 total volume
Same total trade volume using editable exchange presets.
What the cost profile says about this trade.
Fees reduce the result.
Small changes can materially improve real trading ROI.
Maker orders often cost less because they add liquidity.
Lower turnover means fewer repeated trading fees.
BNB-style discounts can reduce fee drag when available.
Crypto exchange fees comparison can reveal large gaps.
Batch movements where possible and avoid unnecessary transfers.
Spread can cost more than the visible exchange fee.
Next tool
Simulate your strategy with price changes, crashes, and long-term growth.
Create a clean summary before comparing exchanges.
Guide
A crypto fee calculator helps traders answer a simple question: how much are crypto fees really costing this trade? The visible exchange fee is only one part of the total. A crypto trading fee calculator should also account for spread, withdrawal fees, network fees and how those costs reduce profit after fees.
This page works as a Binance fee calculator, Bybit fee calculator, OKX fee calculator, Coinbase fee calculator and MEXC fee calculator by using editable exchange presets. The presets are estimates, not official fee schedules. Real fees can change by volume tier, VIP level, region, trading pair, market type and promotions.
To calculate crypto trading fees, multiply trade size per order by filled orders and the maker or taker fee rate. Then add spread or slippage cost, withdrawal fee and network fee. The analyzer shows cost as a percentage of total traded volume so repeated trading does not look like a single $1,000 order.
The exchange with the lowest fees depends on the market and order type. MEXC can be cheap when a 0% maker or spot-fee promotion applies, but that does not make every MEXC trade free: taker fees, eligibility rules, spread, liquidity, withdrawal fees, network fees, futures fees and API terms can still create cost. Coinbase Advanced can be more expensive for small trades, while Binance, Bybit and OKX often sit closer together. A crypto exchange fees comparison is most useful when it uses your actual trade size and trading frequency.
Fees matter for ROI because frequent trading compounds small costs. A strategy that appears profitable before fees can become much weaker after exchange fees, spreads and withdrawals. Use this calculator as a first pass, then check official exchange schedules before placing trades.
FAQ
Most exchanges charge a percentage of trade volume, with separate maker and taker rates. Spread, withdrawal fees and network fees can add more cost.
Maker orders add liquidity and often pay lower fees. Taker orders execute immediately and usually cost more.
It depends on your market type, order type, volume tier, pair, region and promotions. Use the comparison as an editable estimate.
Not universally. Maker or promotional spot conditions can be 0%, but taker fees, futures fees, API or account rules, spread, liquidity impact, withdrawals and network fees can still apply.
Yes. Fees reduce profit after fees and can meaningfully lower ROI when trades are frequent or profit margins are small.
Spread is the difference between available buy and sell prices. It is often a hidden trading cost.
Yes. Add withdrawal and network fee assumptions to estimate full trade cost.
Yes. The exchange presets are starting values only. You can edit maker and taker rates for your own fee tier.
Quality notes
Lamppoli calculators are designed to answer a practical crypto question quickly, then show the assumptions behind the result.
Use this analyzer before placing frequent trades, comparing exchanges or checking why a small profitable move became flat after costs. It helps separate trading fee, spread, withdrawal and network cost assumptions.
Use the result as a planning estimate, then review fees, taxes, slippage, liquidity and risk separately before making decisions.
More FAQ
A maker order adds liquidity to the order book, while a taker order removes liquidity. Many exchanges price these order types differently.
Spread, withdrawal fees, network costs, conversion fees and repeated orders can increase the real cost beyond the headline maker or taker rate.
No. Fee presets are estimates and may vary by region, volume tier, pair, promotions and account status. Edit the assumptions when needed.