Funding Rate Calculator
Estimate the funding payment for your crypto perpetual futures position. This calculator computes your funding cost or income per interval, daily, weekly, monthly, and for any custom holding period — factoring in leverage and position size.
What Is Funding Rate in Crypto Futures?
If you have ever traded perpetual futures on exchanges like Binance, OKX, or Bybit, you have probably noticed small amounts of money quietly leaving — or entering — your account every eight hours. That is the funding rate at work.
Unlike traditional futures contracts that expire on a set date, perpetual futures have no expiry. This creates a problem: without an expiry date, the futures price could drift far away from the actual spot price of the asset. Funding rates are the mechanism exchanges use to keep these two prices anchored together.
Here is the simple version of how it works:
- When the futures price is higher than spot (bullish market sentiment), the funding rate is positive. Long traders pay short traders. This discourages excessive long positions and pulls the futures price back down toward spot.
- When the futures price is lower than spot (bearish market sentiment), the funding rate is negative. Short traders pay long traders. This discourages excessive short positions and pushes the futures price back up toward spot.
- When the market is balanced, the funding rate is near zero and neither side pays the other.
Funding payments are settled every 8 hours on most major exchanges (at 00:00, 08:00, and 16:00 UTC). Some newer exchanges have moved to 1-hour or 4-hour intervals, but the 8-hour cycle remains the industry standard.
The funding rate is not a fee charged by the exchange — it is a direct payment between traders on opposite sides of the market. The exchange itself does not collect funding. This is an important distinction: funding rate is a cost or income depending on which direction you are positioned.
For short-term traders who open and close positions within a few hours, funding rate is barely noticeable. But for anyone holding a leveraged perpetual futures position overnight, across several days, or as part of a long-term hedging strategy, funding rate can become a significant factor that makes the difference between a profitable and unprofitable trade.
Funding Rate Formula: How Is It Calculated?
Understanding the math behind funding rate gives you full control over your cost calculations. There are two layers to this: how the exchange sets the funding rate, and how you calculate your actual payment.
How Exchanges Determine the Funding Rate
Most exchanges derive the funding rate from two components: the Interest Rate and the Premium Index.
Funding Rate = Premium Index + clamp(Interest Rate − Premium Index, −0.05%, +0.05%)
In practice, the Interest Rate component is small and fixed (typically 0.01% per 8h on Binance). The dominant variable is the Premium Index — the gap between the futures mark price and the spot index price. The wider the gap, the higher the funding rate in that direction.
You do not need to calculate this yourself — exchanges publish the current and predicted funding rate on every perpetual futures pair in real time. What matters for traders is knowing what that rate costs you given your specific position.
Funding Payment Formula (Per Interval)
Once you know the funding rate, calculating your payment is straightforward:
Funding Payment = Notional Value × Funding Rate
Where:
- Notional Value = Position Size (USD) × Leverage. For example, $1,000 margin at 10x leverage = $10,000 notional value.
- Funding Rate is expressed as a percentage (e.g., 0.01% = 0.0001).
From there, you can project funding across any time horizon:
Daily Funding = Funding Payment × 3 (3 intervals × 8 hours = 24 hours)
Weekly Funding = Daily Funding × 7
Total Funding = Daily Funding × Number of Days Held
Annualized Rate (%) = Funding Rate × 3 × 365
Worked Example
Suppose you open a long BTC position with a $2,000 margin at 5x leverage. Your notional value is $10,000. The current funding rate is +0.01% per 8 hours.
- Funding per interval: $10,000 × 0.0001 = $1.00 (you pay, as a long)
- Daily funding: $1.00 × 3 = $3.00 per day
- Weekly funding: $3.00 × 7 = $21.00 per week
- Monthly funding (30 days): $3.00 × 30 = $90.00 per month
- Annualized rate: 0.01% × 3 × 365 = 10.95% per year
That $90 monthly cost on a $2,000 margin position represents a 4.5% drag on your capital every month — entirely separate from any price movement. At high leverage, this cost compounds quickly and can eliminate gains from a successful trade direction.
Conversely, if you are short during a period of high positive funding, you collect that payment as income — making your position profitable even in a sideways market. This is the foundation of the cash-and-carry trade strategy used by professional crypto desks.
How to Use the Funding Rate Calculator
Our Funding Rate Calculator handles all of the math above in seconds. Here is exactly how to use it:
Step 1 — Enter Your Position Size (USD)
This is the amount of margin (collateral) you are putting into the trade, in USD.
For example, if you deposit $500 as margin for a futures position, enter 500.
Do not enter the notional value here — the calculator multiplies by your leverage automatically.
Step 2 — Enter Your Entry Price
Input the price at which you opened (or plan to open) the position. This is used to calculate the number of coins your position represents, which helps contextualize the funding cost relative to your actual exposure.
Step 3 — Set Your Leverage
Enter the leverage multiplier for your position (e.g., 10 for 10x leverage).
The default is 1 (no leverage / spot equivalent).
Remember: higher leverage increases your notional value and therefore your
funding payment proportionally. A 10x leveraged position pays 10x more
funding than an unlevered position of the same margin size.
Step 4 — Enter the Funding Rate
Input the current or predicted funding rate as a percentage per 8-hour interval.
You can find this on your exchange's futures trading page next to the perpetual pair
(usually displayed as "Funding Rate" or "Funding / Countdown").
A positive value (e.g., 0.01) means longs pay shorts.
A negative value (e.g., -0.005) means shorts pay longs.
The default is 0.01%, which is the Binance baseline rate.
Step 5 — Set Your Holding Period
Enter the number of days you plan to hold the position.
The calculator uses this to compute your total funding cost or income for the
entire duration of the trade. Use 1 for a single day, 7
for a week, or any custom number.
Step 6 — Click Calculate and Read Your Results
The calculator instantly returns a complete breakdown for both long and short positions:
- Notional Value — your true market exposure after leverage
- Funding Direction — which side pays, and the annualized rate
- Per Interval / Daily / Weekly / Monthly funding amount in USD
- Total Funding for your specified holding period
- Position Summary — all inputs and derived rates in one table
Results shown in green represent income (you receive funding). Results shown in red represent a cost (you pay funding). Both long and short scenarios are displayed simultaneously, so you can evaluate which side of the trade is more cost-efficient at the current rate.
Pro Tip: Use Funding Rate as a Market Sentiment Indicator
Beyond calculating costs, the funding rate itself is a powerful signal. When the rate is extremely high and positive (e.g., above 0.1% per 8h), the market is heavily overleveraged to the long side — historically a warning sign of an imminent long squeeze or price correction. When the rate is deeply negative, excessive short positions are building up, often preceding a short squeeze rally. Experienced traders use funding rate alongside open interest and liquidation data to time entries and exits with greater precision.
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