Binance leverage, fees & liquidation
Binance Futures offers up to 125x on BTC with a tiered maintenance margin that starts near 0.4% and climbs with position size. Taker fees are about 0.04% (less if you pay with BNB). Set maintenance margin to ~0.4% above for a Binance estimate. The catch: 125x only applies to the smallest position tiers — the larger your notional, the lower your max leverage and the higher the maintenance margin, so your real liquidation buffer shrinks exactly when you size up.
How liquidation price works
Liquidation happens when your losses eat the margin backing the position. For an isolated long, the rough formula is entry × (1 − 1/leverage + maintenance margin); for a short it is entry × (1 + 1/leverage − maintenance margin). Higher leverage puts liquidation closer to your entry — at 10x a long is wiped by roughly a 10% drop, at 25x by about 4%. That is why sizing matters: use the position size calculator to risk a fixed amount, and the PnL calculator to see the upside before you enter.
Frequently asked questions
How is crypto liquidation price calculated?
For an isolated long, liquidation ≈ entry × (1 − 1/leverage + maintenance margin); for a short, entry × (1 + 1/leverage − maintenance margin). Higher leverage moves liquidation closer to entry, so a smaller move wipes the position.
At what price do I get liquidated at 10x?
At 10x a long is liquidated by roughly a 10% drop from entry (slightly less with maintenance margin); a short by roughly a 10% rise. At 25x it is about 4%, at 50x about 2%.
Is this accurate for Bybit and Binance?
It is a close estimate using the standard isolated-margin formula. Real exchanges add fees and funding, use tiered maintenance margin that rises with position size, and cross margin pulls in your whole balance — leave a safety buffer beyond the calculated price.
How do I avoid getting liquidated?
Use lower leverage so liquidation sits far from entry, size from how much you are willing to lose, and place a stop-loss well before the liquidation price so you exit on your terms — not the exchange's.