CRYPTO EXCHANGE
Bybit Fees Explained (2025): Spot, Perpetuals, Options, Funding & Withdrawal Costs

Bybit Fees Explained (2025): Spot, Perpetuals, Options, Funding & Withdrawal Costs

Bybit Fees Explained (2025): Spot, Perpetuals, Options, Funding & Withdrawal Costs

Bybit Fees: The Complete 2025 Guide

Understand every cost on BYBIT — from spot and derivatives trading fees to funding, conversions, and withdrawals — and learn how to reduce your all-in trading expenses.

Quick Overview: What counts as “Bybit fees”?

When traders search for “Bybit fees,” they usually mean the headline maker/taker rates. In reality, your all-in cost often includes several moving parts:

  • Trading fees (spot, perpetuals/futures, options; maker vs. taker)
  • Funding (periodic payments between longs/shorts on perpetuals)
  • Conversion/fiat costs (on-ramp/off-ramp, card, P2P)
  • Withdrawal/network fees (miners/validators, dynamic by chain)
  • Spread & slippage (indirect cost driven by liquidity and execution)

Effective Cost Formula: All-in Cost = Trading Fee +/− Funding + Conversion/Fiat Fees + Network Fee + Spread/Slippage

Pair this with a consistent plan for entries and exits. If you’re building a structured approach, see our guides on market-regime strategies, mean-reversion, and discretion vs. automation.

Spot Trading Fees

Bybit spot trading uses a maker/taker model. Taker orders remove liquidity (market/IOC), while maker orders add liquidity (resting limit orders). Taker rates are typically higher than maker rates.

What affects your spot fee?

  • VIP level (30-day volume & balance thresholds may reduce the rate)
  • Pair type (crypto-crypto vs. fiat-crypto can follow different schedules)
  • Order type (maker vs. taker)

Example (for illustration only): On a $5,000 USDT spot buy executed as a taker at 0.10%, the trading fee would be $5. If instead you place a resting maker order at 0.08%, the fee would be $4. (Numbers are examples; check your account’s current schedule when you place the order.)

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Perpetual & Futures Fees

Derivatives on Bybit (USDT/USDC-margined or coin-margined) also use maker/taker rates. These are commonly lower than spot rates because of deeper liquidity and active market-making.

Key points

  • Maker vs. Taker: Maker is lower; taker pays more for immediacy.
  • Contract type: USDT-margined vs. coin-margined may carry slightly different fees.
  • VIP tiers: High-volume traders can unlock additional discounts or rebates.

Illustrative example: A $100,000 notional USDT-margined perpetual taker fill at 0.055% would cost $55 in trading fees; a maker fill at 0.020% would cost $20. (Again, figures are examples to show the math.)

Options Trading Fees

Bybit options price fees on filled premium (and sometimes notional), and apply a single rate to taker orders. Maker quotes can receive a preferential rate or rebate depending on program and tier.

Illustrative math: If you buy a call for a premium of 0.05 BTC and the taker fee is 0.02%, your fee would be 0.00001 BTC. Always check how fees apply to premium vs. notional per instrument before placing complex spreads.

Funding Rate (Perpetual Contracts)

The funding rate is a periodic payment exchanged directly between longs and shorts to keep the perp close to the spot price. Funding can be positive or negative; you either pay it or receive it depending on your position side at the funding timestamp.

  • When it applies: Typically every 8 hours (common cadence), but Bybit can set different intervals per market.
  • How it’s calculated: Often derived from a premium/discount index plus an interest component, then applied to position value.
  • Practical tip: If funding is expensive and you hold for longer, it can exceed trading fees — plan entries around funding windows if timing is flexible.

Fiat, Conversions & Card-Related Costs

On-ramping/off-ramping via card or third-party processors may include conversion spreads and processing fees. These are separate from trading fees and vary by provider, currency, and region. P2P desks can be an alternative, but evaluate counterparty terms and escrow protections carefully.

Deposits & Withdrawals

Crypto deposits are typically free, but withdrawals incur a network fee that goes to miners/validators. This cost is dynamic by chain and congestion — e.g., Layer-2s often cost less than mainnets in busy periods. If you move funds frequently, choose assets/chains with lower average costs.

VIP Tiers, Market Maker Programs & Rebates

Bybit runs tiered schedules where higher 30-day volumes and/or higher balances unlock lower fees (and in some cases, maker rebates). Professional or market-maker programs can further improve rates if you maintain quote quality and minimum volumes.

What usually counts toward VIP?

  • 30-day trading volume (spot and/or derivatives)
  • Eligible asset balances (depends on program rules)
  • Compliance/KYC level (limits, access and fiat rails may depend on this)

Worked Examples (Step-by-Step)

1) Spot Taker Buy → Wallet Withdrawal

  1. Buy $10,000 of BTC as a taker (illustrative 0.10%): fee = $10.00.
  2. Withdraw BTC on a low-fee chain; assume a dynamic network fee of $3.50 equivalent.
  3. All-in cost ≈ $13.50 plus any spread/slippage at entry.

2) Perp Maker Entry Held Over 24h With Funding

  1. Open $200,000 notional long as a maker (illustrative 0.020%): fee = $40.
  2. Hold across three 8-hour funding prints at +0.01% each: funding paid = $200,000 × 0.0001 × 3 = $60.
  3. Total cost ≈ $100 before exit fees, PnL and slippage.

Note: These are examples for clarity; your actual fee rates and funding vary by account tier, instrument, and market conditions at the time of trade.

How to Reduce Your Bybit Fees

  • Use maker orders where practical; stage limit orders near fair value to avoid taker charges.
  • Consolidate volume to qualify for a better VIP tier.
  • Time entries around funding if you plan to hold perps through the window.
  • Pick efficient rails for withdrawals (L2s/sidechains can be cheaper when busy).
  • Avoid overtrading: spreads and slippage compound fast in thin markets.
  • Compare liquidity across venues. For certain pairs and promos, BITGET or MEXC may offer tighter spreads or fee incentives on specific markets compared to Bybit.

Bybit Fees vs. “The Real Cost” of Trading

Fees are only part of the picture. The spread (bid/ask gap) plus slippage (price movement while your order fills) can easily exceed the posted maker/taker rate on fast moves. Back-test or log a month of trades to estimate your effective cost by pair and time of day, then adapt your playbook accordingly.

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FAQ: Bybit Fees

Are Bybit spot fees the same for every pair?

No. Crypto-crypto vs. fiat-crypto pairs can have different fee schedules. Liquidity and spreads also vary by pair.

Do I pay both trading fees and funding on perps?

Yes. You pay trading fees when you open/close. Separately, you may pay or receive funding at set intervals while a position is open, depending on the funding rate and your side.

How do Bybit VIP tiers reduce costs?

Higher recent volume and qualifying balances can unlock lower maker/taker rates (and sometimes maker rebates). Check your dashboard for your current tier and the next threshold.

Are deposits free? What about withdrawals?

Deposits are typically free. Withdrawals incur a dynamic network fee paid to miners/validators; the cost depends on the chain and congestion.

What’s the fastest way to cut my Bybit fees tomorrow?

Switch taker market orders to resting maker limits where possible, and route withdrawals via lower-fee chains. Review funding before holding perps through the next timestamp.

Bottom line: Know your exact maker/taker rates, watch funding before you hold, and keep an eye on conversion and network costs. Small optimizations add up — especially if you scale your volume or qualify for better tiers on BYBIT.

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