
Educational Resource
How to Trade Crypto Futures: A Complete Guide
Master cryptocurrency futures trading with clear explanations of contracts, leverage, margin requirements, and proven risk management techniques.
Active Futures Markets
Real-time price movements across the most traded cryptocurrency futures contracts on major exchanges.
Crypto Futures Trading by the Numbers
Trade on evedex. Global cryptocurrency futures markets process billions in daily volume across thousands of active contracts and traders.
What You Need to Trade Crypto Futures
Contract Types
Perpetual contracts have no expiry date, while quarterly futures settle on specific dates with premium or discount to spot price.
Leverage and Margin
Control larger positions with borrowed funds — typical ranges are 2x to 100x, requiring collateral maintained in your margin account.
Funding Rates
Periodic payments between long and short traders that keep perpetual prices aligned with spot markets, typically every 8 hours.
Liquidation Risk
Your position closes automatically if losses reduce margin below maintenance level, protecting both trader and exchange.

Fund Your Account
Deposit USDT, USDC, or other accepted collateral to your futures wallet — this becomes your margin for trading positions.
Common Questions
Spot trading involves buying and owning the actual cryptocurrency, while futures let you speculate on price direction without owning the asset. Futures allow leverage, short positions, and often have lower fees, but they carry liquidation risk if the market moves against you.
Most exchanges allow futures trading with as little as $10 to $100, though realistic position sizing and risk management typically require $500 or more. Starting small lets you learn order types, margin mechanics, and funding rates before scaling up your capital allocation.
On most cryptocurrency exchanges, losses are limited to your account balance due to automatic liquidation systems that close positions before they go negative. However, extreme volatility or exchange system failures can occasionally result in negative balances, so risk management tools and stop-loss orders remain essential for every trade you place.
With 10x leverage, every $1 in your margin account controls $10 worth of a futures contract. A 5% price move results in a 50% gain or loss on your margin. Higher leverage amplifies both profits and losses, making position sizing and stop-losses critical to avoid liquidation.
Funding rates are periodic payments between long and short traders that keep perpetual contract prices near spot. If the rate is positive, longs pay shorts; if negative, shorts pay longs. Rates typically exchange every 8 hours and can add or subtract from your position's profitability over time.