Binance.US has rolled out a sweeping fee overhaul, setting maker fees at 0% and taker fees at 0.02% across all spot pairs, with no volume tiers or subscription requirements. The move undercuts most US-facing rivals by a wide margin and signals a renewed push by the exchange to rebuild market share in a competitive domestic landscape. For active traders, the change has immediate implications for cost-to-trade and execution strategy.
What Happened
Binance.US announced that every user, regardless of 30-day volume, will pay 0 basis points on maker orders and 2 basis points on taker orders on all spot markets. Many US competitors charge maker and taker fees in the range of 10 to 40 basis points at lower volume tiers, and even the most aggressive retail-facing rivals typically require a paid subscription, a native token holding, or a high-volume ladder to approach this pricing. The new structure is flat and unconditional, removing the usual complexity of fee schedules. Binance.US framed the cut as part of a broader strategy to grow active users after a stretch of regulatory pressure and platform changes, with leadership emphasizing that the exchange intends to compete directly on price, liquidity, and product breadth.
What It Means for Traders
The most obvious effect is a meaningful drop in round-trip costs for high-turnover strategies. A trader making frequent adjustments across multiple pairs can save a noticeable portion of returns that previously went to fees, which widens the set of strategies that are economically viable. Market makers in particular stand to benefit from the zero-maker structure, which can improve depth and tighten spreads across Binance.US order books. Tighter spreads often pull volume away from wider-spread venues, creating a reinforcing cycle. For retail users, the practical question is whether the exchange lists the pairs they actually trade, whether withdrawal fees and spreads are competitive, and whether customer support and uptime match the needs of their strategy. Lower fees are meaningful only if execution quality holds up under load.
The Bigger Picture
The US spot trading market has matured into a contest among a handful of large platforms, with Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, Robinhood, and several newer entrants competing for similar audiences. Fee compression has been a long-running theme, but truly flat zero-maker pricing moves the industry closer to the equities model, where brokerage commissions collapsed to zero and revenue shifted toward payment for order flow, margin lending, and premium services. Binance.US is betting that it can win on volume and monetize through adjacent products rather than spot fees themselves. Rivals will face pressure either to match the pricing or to differentiate sharply on product, liquidity, or trust. How the industry responds over the coming months will shape take rates, liquidity distribution, and potentially the profitability profile of publicly traded exchanges.
Binance.US’s near-zero fee structure raises the competitive bar for US crypto exchanges, and traders should expect broader fee pressure across the industry. Whether that translates into sustained market share depends on liquidity, reliability, and how quickly peers respond.


















