Funding Rate Calculator
Calculate funding costs and discover arbitrage opportunities
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Arbitrage Scenario
Funding Rate Arbitrage: If the funding rate is positive, you can go long on spot and short the perpetual to collect funding payments with minimal directional risk. Your profit is the funding received minus the spot trading fees.
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What Are Funding Rates?
Funding rates are periodic payments that occur between traders holding long and short positions on perpetual futures contracts. They serve as the primary mechanism for keeping the price of a perpetual futures contract in line with the underlying spot market price. Without funding rates, the perpetual futures price could diverge significantly from the actual asset price, creating inefficiencies and unfair trading conditions.
The funding rate is composed of two parts: the interest rate component and the premium or discount component. The interest rate is typically fixed at a small value (around 0.01% per interval on most exchanges). The premium component is dynamic and reflects the difference between the perpetual futures price and the spot price. When the perpetual trades at a premium to spot, the funding rate becomes more positive, and when it trades at a discount, the rate becomes more negative or less positive.
How Funding Rates Work on Perpetual Futures
On most major exchanges like Binance, Bybit, and OKX, funding is exchanged every 8 hours at 00:00, 08:00, and 16:00 UTC. At each settlement, your funding payment is calculated as: Position Value x Funding Rate. For example, with a $10,000 position and a 0.01% funding rate, you would pay or receive $1.00 per interval, or $3.00 per day.
Importantly, you only pay or receive funding if you hold a position at the exact settlement time. If you close your position one second before the funding event, you will not be charged. This is why many short-term traders time their entries and exits around funding events to avoid unnecessary costs. Over a 30-day holding period, even a seemingly small 0.01% rate compounds to 0.9% of your position value, and during volatile markets the rate can spike to 0.1% or higher, costing 9% per month.
Funding Rate Arbitrage Strategy
Funding rate arbitrage is one of the most popular low-risk strategies in cryptocurrency markets. The concept is straightforward: when the funding rate is positive, you buy the asset on the spot market and simultaneously open a short perpetual futures position of the same size. The spot and futures positions offset each other in terms of price exposure, meaning you have no directional risk.
Your profit comes from the funding payments you receive as a short holder when the funding rate is positive. The cost is the trading fees for opening and eventually closing both positions. This strategy works best when funding rates are consistently high over an extended period, which typically occurs during strong bull markets when retail traders are overwhelmingly long. The annualized return from this strategy can range from 10% to over 100% during extreme market conditions, making it attractive to both individual traders and institutional market makers.
Tips for Managing Funding Costs
Monitor funding rates before holding positions overnight. Many traders enter leveraged positions without considering funding costs, only to find that days or weeks of accumulated funding payments have significantly reduced their profits. Always check the current and predicted funding rate before deciding to hold a perpetual futures position.
Use this calculator to estimate total costs. Before committing to a position, input your planned position size and the current funding rate to see how much you will pay over your expected holding period. Compare this cost to your expected profit target to ensure the trade is still worthwhile after funding expenses. If the break-even price movement exceeds what you reasonably expect the market to move, the trade may not be worth taking.
Consider alternatives during high-funding periods. When funding rates are elevated, consider using spot margin trading, quarterly futures contracts that do not carry funding rates, or simply reducing your position size to minimize the funding drag on your returns. Smart traders adapt their strategy to the current funding environment rather than ignoring it.