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Futures and Products FAQs
"Learn about LeveX futures trading, including perpetual swaps, fees, margin requirements, insurance fund, auto-deleverage, and liquidation processes.
Go BackLast Updated: 2025-05-28

Futures and Products FAQs

Q: What are the perpetual swaps available on LeveX?

A: You can find a complete list of available perpetual swaps on our futures trading platform. We offer USDT, USDC, and Coin-M perpetual contracts across major cryptocurrencies. Check our trading data page for detailed information about each pair.

Q: What are the trading fees?

A: In the Futures market, our standard Maker fee is 0.02% and Taker fee is 0.06% of your trade value. Our VIP program offers significant fee discounts for active traders. Visit our fees and conditions page for complete fee information.

Q: Does LeveX charge a fee for using margin?

A: No, LeveX does not charge a fee for using margin or opening leveraged positions. You only pay trading fees when you execute trades.

Q: What are the fees that I need to be aware of?

A: When trading perpetual contracts, be aware of trading fees (Maker: 0.02%, Taker: 0.06%) and funding fees, which are paid between traders every 8 hours to keep the perpetual contract price close to the spot price. Check our fees and conditions for detailed explanations.

Q: What is Auto-Deleverage (ADL)?

A: ADL is a safety feature that activates when a liquidated position can't be closed at a safe price and the insurance fund falls short. It automatically reduces the size of opposing profitable positions to cover the loss, protecting the platform's stability and all traders.

Q: What is an Insurance Fund?

A: The Insurance Fund is a reserve pool used to cover losses that exceed a trader's initial margin during liquidation. It protects traders from owing more than their initial investment and ensures that profitable traders aren't automatically burdened with covering these losses through ADL.

Q: Why is my position liquidated?

A: Your position was liquidated because the loss reached a level that neither the position's margin nor your account's available margin could cover. Liquidation prevents further losses and protects your account from going into debt. You can avoid liquidation by monitoring your margin ratio and adding more margin when needed.