Fee Structure
OrangeBit implements a transparent and competitive fee structure for perpetual contract trading. Fees are displayed to users prior to order confirmation and are calculated based on the notional value of the trade. This aligns with our principles of fairness, auditability, and non-custodial asset control.
Fee Structure
Maker Fee: Charged when you place an order that adds liquidity to the order book (e.g., a limit order that rests until matched).
Taker Fee: Charged when you place an order that removes liquidity (e.g., a market order or an immediate fill).
Other associated fees may include network/execution costs, funding payments (for perpetual contracts), or optional discounts (e.g., token-based fee rebates).
Example Fee Rates (Illustrative)
Maker
0.02%
Taker
0.06%
Note: Actual fee rates may vary by contract, leverage level, trading mode (Simple vs Pro), or be subject to VIP tier discounts.
Fee Calculation
Fees are calculated using the following formula:
Fee = Notional Value × Fee Rate
Notional Value = Number of Contracts × Transaction PriceExample
A trader places a market (taker) buy order for 0.5 BTC at US$80,000 with a taker fee rate of 0.06%.
Notional Value = 0.5 × 80,000 = US$40,000
Fee = 40,000 × 0.06% = US$24
Discounts & Rebates
Traders may receive fee discounts when using platform-native tokens or achieving higher VIP levels.
Liquidity providers (makers) may earn rebates or negative-fee rates for supplying deep liquidity, thereby reducing market impact and slippage.
Transparency & Settlement
All fees are deducted at settlement and reflected in the user’s on-chain vault balance or off-chain ledger, with full audit log visibility.
OrangeBit never retains user funds; fee collection is executed via smart contract logic, maintaining non-custodial integrity.
OrangeBit’s fee model is designed to be:
Competitive: Low maker/taker fees to attract liquidity and traders.
Transparent: Clear before-trade display and auditable on-chain records.
Aligned with User Control: Non-custodial fee deduction, no hidden costs, consistent with OrangeBit’s focus on user asset sovereignty.
Last updated