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Perpetual contract trading

What Is a Perpetual Contract in Crypto Trading

Last Updated: June 2, 2026

A perpetual contract is a derivative that lets you speculate on the price of Bitcoin, Ethereum, or other cryptocurrencies without owning the underlying asset. Unlike traditional futures contracts, perpetual contracts have no expiration date, so you can hold a position for as long as you want — provided you manage your margin and cover funding rates. These contracts use leverage, meaning you control a large position with a relatively small amount of capital. That leverage can magnify gains, but it also increases the risk of liquidation if the market moves against you. Perpetual contracts have become the dominant trading instrument on crypto exchanges, accounting for the majority of derivatives volume. They're popular because they offer 24/7 trading, deep liquidity, and the ability to profit in both rising and falling markets. If you want to understand how perpetual contracts work before placing your first trade, explore leverage trading strategies or review margin requirements on EveDEX. By the end of this guide, you'll know how funding rates keep prices anchored, what triggers liquidation, and how to size positions without overleveraging.

Perpetual vs Traditional Futures

FeaturePerpetualFuturesSpot
ExpirationNone — hold indefinitely as long as margin is sufficient and funding is paidFixed expiry date (weekly, monthly, quarterly) — position settles at expirationNone — you own the asset outright with no time constraint
FundingPeriodic funding rate every 8 hours to align contract price with spotNo funding — basis (price difference) converges naturally at settlementNo funding — you pay only the purchase price and any fees
LeverageUp to 125× on many exchanges, amplifying both gains and liquidation riskTypically lower (5–20×), depending on the exchange and contract specificationsNone — you trade with the full capital required to buy the asset

How Perpetual Contracts Track Spot Prices

Perpetual contracts stay close to the spot market through a mechanism called the funding rate. Every eight hours, traders with long positions pay shorts (or vice versa) depending on whether the perpetual price is trading above or below the spot price. When the contract trades at a premium, longs pay shorts, incentivizing arbitrageurs to sell the perpetual and buy spot, which pushes the contract price down. When the contract trades at a discount, shorts pay longs, encouraging traders to close shorts or open longs, lifting the perpetual price back toward spot. This continuous adjustment prevents the kind of divergence you see in traditional futures, where basis can widen significantly before expiration. Funding rates are small — often between –0.01% and +0.01% per interval — but they compound if you hold a position for days or weeks. You can read more about funding rate mechanics on Binance's official documentation.

Funding rate chart

Six Factors That Drive Perpetual Contract Risk

Before you open a leveraged position, understand the variables that determine whether you profit or get liquidated.

  1. Leverage ratio Using 10× leverage means a 10% adverse move wipes out your margin; 100× leverage leaves almost no room for volatility.
  2. Maintenance margin Exchanges require a minimum margin balance to keep your position open; fall below it and you're liquidated automatically.
  3. Funding rate direction If you're long and funding is consistently positive, you pay shorts every eight hours, eroding your position over time.
  4. Liquidation price This is the exact price at which your position is closed; it's calculated from your entry, leverage, and remaining margin.
  5. Order book depth Thin liquidity can cause slippage during liquidation, meaning you lose slightly more than your margin in extreme moves.
  6. Volatility spikes Sudden price swings — common in crypto — can trigger cascading liquidations, pushing the market even further against you.

Traders often underestimate funding costs on longer holds. If you're planning to keep a position open for weeks, check the historical funding rate for that pair. A rate that averages +0.01% per interval costs you roughly 1% per month on your position size, which adds up. You can see real-time funding rates on most exchange dashboards or track them on CoinGlass.

Liquidation doesn't always happen at the exact theoretical price. During flash crashes or exchange outages, the liquidation engine may execute your close at a worse price than calculated, leaving you with a small negative balance (though most exchanges have insurance funds to cover this). Always use stop-loss orders as a secondary defense and never commit your entire account balance to a single leveraged position.

Trading Perpetual Contracts on EveDEX

EveDEX is a crypto derivatives exchange built for traders who want competitive funding rates, transparent margin calculations, and access to a wide range of perpetual contracts across major and emerging altcoins. The platform supports leverage up to 100× on select pairs, with real-time margin monitoring and customizable liquidation alerts. EveDEX also offers isolated and cross-margin modes: isolated margin limits your risk to the funds allocated to a single position, while cross-margin uses your entire account balance as collateral, giving you more flexibility but higher account-wide risk. You can compare isolated vs cross-margin setups to decide which fits your strategy. The exchange charges maker-taker fees starting at 0.02%/0.05%, with discounts for high-volume traders, and funding intervals follow the industry-standard eight-hour cycle.

FAQ

No. Unlike futures, perpetual contracts have no expiration date. You can hold a position indefinitely as long as you maintain sufficient margin and pay or receive funding rates every eight hours.
Funding rates are periodic payments between long and short traders that keep the contract price aligned with the spot market. When positive, longs pay shorts; when negative, shorts pay longs.
On most exchanges, no. Your position will be liquidated before losses exceed your margin. However, in extreme volatility, slippage during liquidation can result in a small additional loss beyond your margin.
Leverage typically ranges from 1× to 125×, depending on the exchange and the asset. Higher leverage amplifies both gains and losses, increasing liquidation risk.
Monitor your margin ratio closely, use stop-loss orders, avoid excessive leverage, and add margin if your position moves against you. Liquidation happens when your margin falls below the maintenance requirement.