These tools help you understand the real cost of sending, withdrawing, or swapping crypto. With volatile network fees and different withdrawal charges across networks, checking fees before any transaction can save you money and avoid losses.
Calculate the exact amount you receive after Binance withdrawal fees on all supported networks.
Estimate how much value you may lose due to price slippage during token swaps.
Calculate cross-chain bridge transfer costs before moving assets between blockchains.
Estimate USDT transaction fees on the Binance Smart Chain (BEP20).
Calculate real-time Ethereum gas fees for swaps, transfers, and smart contract transactions.
Check low-cost USDT transaction fees on the TRON (TRC20) network before sending.
Fees are a hidden cost of every crypto action: swapping tokens, withdrawing from exchanges, bridging assets across chains, or simply sending stablecoins. This category collects six practical calculators so you can estimate costs and make smarter choices:
Why use these tools? Small mistakes add up. A $5 fee on a $50 transfer is far more expensive than a $1 fee on a $1,000 transfer. These tools help you:
Practical tips: Always check the receiving wallet’s supported network before switching networks. For stablecoins, TRC20 and BEP20 are almost always cheaper than ERC20. For any swap, run the slippage calculator first and use a DEX aggregator when possible. For cross-chain moves, run the bridge fee calculator to compare total fees and expected arrival times.
Use these six calculators together — for example, check swap slippage, then estimate withdrawal fee, and finally check bridge fees if you plan to move proceeds cross-chain. That workflow prevents nasty surprises and protects your capital.
Fees differ because blockchains use different consensus methods, demand levels, and resource costs. Ethereum uses gas and typically has higher fees when the network is busy because every transaction competes for limited processing power. Networks like TRON (TRC20) and Binance Smart Chain (BEP20) were built to be low-cost and fast, so their base fees are usually much smaller. Exchanges may also add a fixed service fee on top of network costs. The result: the same token (for example, USDT) can cost a few cents to move on TRC20/BEP20 but several dollars on ERC20. That’s why checking the correct network and calculator before transferring saves real money.
The choice comes down to cost vs compatibility. TRC20 and BEP20 are cheaper and faster, but the receiving wallet must support those networks. If the destination (another exchange or wallet) only accepts ERC20 for a given token, sending TRC20 will cause a loss. Always confirm the receiver’s accepted network first. When both sides accept multiple networks, choose TRC20 or BEP20 to save fees. If you plan to interact with DeFi protocols on Ethereum, you may prefer ERC20 despite higher gas. Use the BEP20 USDT Fee Calculator and TRC20 Fee Calculator to compare numeric costs before you click “withdraw.”
Swap slippage is the difference between the price you expect and the actual execution price. It happens when liquidity is low or your trade size is large relative to the pool. To reduce slippage: split large orders into smaller trades, use a DEX aggregator that finds the best route across pools, set a conservative slippage tolerance, and trade during times of lower volatility. Our Swap Slippage Calculator shows how much value you could lose for a given trade size and pool conditions so you can decide whether the trade is worth it or should be broken into smaller pieces.
No — bridge transfers usually include multiple costs: the bridge protocol fee, the network gas fees on both the source and destination chains, and occasionally relayer or custody fees. You may also face slippage or conversion fees if the bridge swaps assets during transfer. Some bridges charge a small fixed fee, others take a percentage. Our Bridge Fee Calculator estimates the total cost by combining these components so you see the net amount that will arrive on the other chain. Always test with a small transfer first for safety.
To reduce costs over many transactions: batch withdrawals (withdraw larger amounts less often), use low-fee networks when supported, and schedule non-urgent transfers during low network congestion. For traders moving funds often, consider keeping working capital on a chain with low transfer costs (like BSC or TRON) and only bridge or withdraw when necessary. Use the Binance Withdrawal Fee Calculator together with the BEP20 / TRC20 fee tools to compare full-cost scenarios before acting.