Понимание комиссий
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Keep the article, take the checks
The article explains the situation. This layer turns it into usable judgment: what to keep, what to avoid, and what should change on the next live screen.
What to keep from the article
Work through the main concept first, then move into applied judgment and next actions.
How to stop misreading the fee stack
Users often talk about fees as if there were one number. In reality, network cost, provider cost, platform cost, and execution drag can all hit the same trade for different reasons.
Real pattern: users blame the visible fee and miss the bigger leak
A trader often sees a route and fixates on one visible fee line. Then the route executes poorly and the story becomes 'the fee was too high.' In practice, the bigger loss can come from slippage, price impact, or gas that was never priced in honestly.
How users quietly lose money by optimizing the wrong cost
One of the most common execution mistakes is trying to save the visible fee while accepting a much larger hidden cost somewhere else in the route.
What actually happened
These are public cases and repeated real-world patterns turned into teachable stories. Use them to see how small shortcuts become expensive outcomes in real product flows.
Customers focused on trading costs while the real custody cost sat off-screen
After FTX collapsed, the bankruptcy team said the exchange owed customers about $8.7 billion, including roughly $6.4 billion of fiat and stablecoin described as misappropriated. The lesson is not only about custody. It is also about what users ignore while optimizing for smaller visible platform costs.
One real-world failure usually teaches faster than ten abstract warnings.
If the visible trading experience feels efficient and cheap enough, the bigger structural cost is probably not the thing to worry about.
A platform experience where fee comparison is easy, but the real trust and custody model behind the assets is not being priced mentally at all.
These are the exact product moments where this kind of mistake usually first looks harmless.
Fee literacy is not only about the visible fee stack. It is about refusing to optimize the smallest visible cost while ignoring the largest hidden one.
Price structural costs honestly. A route or platform is not cheap if the hidden trust model can erase the whole asset claim later.
Trying to save a visible fee can hide the much larger leak
A repeated trading mistake is users fixating on one visible fee line while a far bigger cost arrives through route quality, slippage, or hidden trust assumptions. Public platform failures like FTX are the extreme version of that pattern: the cosmetic cost looked fine while the structural cost was catastrophic.
One real-world failure usually teaches faster than ten abstract warnings.
If the fee line looks competitive, the route or platform is probably economically fine overall.
A product surface where visible fees are easy to compare, but route fragility, settlement complexity, or custody assumptions stay mentally discounted.
These are the exact product moments where this kind of mistake usually first looks harmless.
Fee literacy matters because the cost that ruins a trade is often not the one users complain about first.
Use fee analysis to ask what the route is buying and what hidden cost it is quietly exposing you to. Cheap-looking is not the same thing as cheap.
Decision rules
Common mistakes
Before you sign or confirm
This section should help in the moment of risk. Keep one question in mind: what should I check right now before giving authority or sending the route forward?
Quick fee check
Decision flow
Do not use this like a reading section. Use it as the order of operations when the screen is asking for authority or final confirmation.
How to think through it
Separate the costs
Break the route into network cost, provider or platform cost, and execution drag before you call anything expensive.
Compare cost against route quality
Ask what the fee stack is buying: better depth, faster settlement, simpler trust, or just a cosmetic difference in presentation.
Price the hidden layer honestly
If the route adds bridge, custody, fragility, or worse execution quality, count that as economic cost even if it is not labeled as a fee.
Signals to notice
That usually means the route may be shifting cost out of the visible line and into execution or trust risk.
That often means the whole trade is being mispriced if the user is still focused on a smaller visible provider fee.
Without that answer, fee comparison is cosmetic and can easily lead to optimizing the wrong number.
Short scenarios
Use quick situations like these to test whether the concept would hold up in a real product flow.
Cheaper visible fee, worse route
Small trade, gas dominates
Keep building
Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.
Related references
Once the core lesson is clear, use these paths to widen the mental model or go deeper where the concept matters most.