Gate Fee Calculator
Bottom line: use this Gate fee calculator when the search clearly asks about Gate spot fees, futures fees, or tier assumptions. For a cross-exchange answer, use the main comparison calculator instead.
Quick answer
Use this Gate fee calculator to estimate trading fees from order value, maker/taker mix, and tier assumptions. Treat the result as a pre-trade estimate, not a live account-specific quote.
| Formula | Trading fee = order value x maker or taker fee rate, adjusted for VIP tier and available fee discounts where selected. |
|---|---|
| Inputs | Market type, maker/taker mix, 30-day volume, average order size, orders per month, and discount options. |
| Sources | Gate fee assumptions are page presets for estimation; the calculator does not call a live exchange fee API. |
| Limits | Real costs can differ because of VIP changes, regional rules, promotions, spread, slippage, funding, and withdrawal fees. |
Model Gate spot and futures fees with tier assumptions visible
Gate searches usually want a direct Gate answer, but the user still needs to know whether spot or futures is the right route. This page answers both by making the market choice, tier level, and average order size visible in the UI.
Gate fee tiers by market
The page now shows the assumptions directly so the answer is useful and auditable.
| Tier | Volume Threshold | Maker | Taker |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier |
Scenario cards
Why Gate-only intent matters
Gate-specific searches usually mean the user already has intent to trade there. The best result is a page that estimates Gate cost directly, then clearly explains when spot or futures is the better model.
This page keeps the product split explicit because Gate spot and futures are not interchangeable. That matters when the user is trying to price real trading behavior instead of just reading about fee classes.
If the real question is which exchange is cheapest, the comparison page is the better answer. This page is for Gate-only intent.
Common Gate mistakes
Mistake 1: collapsing spot and futures into one generic cost number. The execution path matters, so the page keeps them separate.
Mistake 2: assuming tier benefits without checking the volume threshold that actually applies.
Mistake 3: using Gate-only intent to answer a cheapest-exchange question. That belongs on the comparison calculator.
Need a cross-exchange decision?
Then move to the broader comparison tool. This page is for Gate-only intent; the main exchange fee calculator is where Gate should be benchmarked against Binance, Bybit, OKX, Coinbase, and Kraken.
Open Exchange Fee Calculator →Gate Fee Calculator FAQ
What does the Gate fee calculator cover?
This page focuses on Gate spot and futures trading fees, maker and taker pricing, and tiered discounts. It is designed for users specifically searching for Gate fee information.
Are Gate spot and futures fees different?
Yes. Spot and futures are separate products with different fee structures, so the calculator lets you compare them independently rather than assuming one universal rate.
Do Gate discounts depend on volume?
Like most exchanges, Gate can reduce fees at higher tiers. If you trade more volume, the effective fee estimate may improve, which is why the calculator includes tier-based pricing.
When should I use the exchange comparison calculator?
Use the main exchange comparison calculator when you want to compare Gate against Binance, Bybit, OKX, Coinbase, or Kraken and see the cheapest option overall.