Polymarket Fee Surge Explained: Where Did 90%+ of Extreme Fees Come From?
Original Title: "Deep Dive into Polymarket's Fee Formula: How Did 90%+ Extreme Fee Rate Come About?"
Original Author: Azuma, Odaily Planet Daily
Polymarket suddenly found itself in a fee controversy.
Many community users discovered last night that when trading on Polymarket, they were charged unusually high fees, resulting in a significant reduction in received shares or earnings compared to before.
Overseas user Frosen (@frosen) even posted a screenshot, indicating that they tried to place an order for 100 shares at a price of 0.1 cents in an "economics" market, but the Polymarket frontend displayed a correct payout amount of only $5.2 (which should normally be $100) — corresponding to an outrageously high fee rate of 94.8%!

What's going on? Is Polymarket going crazy for money? Odaily, based on Polymarket's official disclosure and community investigation, found that the direct cause of this unexpected situation was that Polymarket modified the platform's fee formula last night, with three versions of changes:
· First was the "old formula" introduced since March 30: fee = C × p × feeRate × (p × (1 - p))^exponent;
· Then came the first modification, the formula that caused the unexpected situation (referred to as the "abnormal formula"): fee = C × feeRate × (p × (1 - p))^exponent;
· Subsequently, after realizing the issue, Polymarket made corrections, resulting in the current version of the "new formula": fee = C × feeRate × p × (1 - p);
· It's important to note that in all three formulas, C refers to the number of shares traded, p refers to the share price, and feeRate and exponent are variables.


Decoding the Abnormal Formula, How Did the 94.8% Outrageous Fee Rate Occur?
You don't need to worry too much about the math details. By comparing the "Old Formula" and "Anomalous Formula," you can easily see that the latter only removes one "× p" (this is the multiplication symbol, not the lowercase x), meaning it ultimately multiplies the share price one less time.
Since the price of all shares on Polymarket is always less than 1 USD, this will inevitably lead to a overall increase in fees. The lower the price of shares, the more significant the fee increase due to skipping one multiplication — when the share price approaches 0, the fee rate may become absurdly high.
As for how absurd this fee can become, it also depends on the same variable ^exponent present in both the Old Formula and Anomalous Formula. Translated directly, ^exponent means "raised to the power of exponent," and this variable is mainly used to control the steepness of the fee curve.
According to Polymarket staff member Mustafa, the anomaly formula introduced last night only included the exponent in two types of markets: "Weather" and "Economic." According to overseas KOL Quant Chad (@Autonomous_Chad), the exponent parameter set for these two major markets at the time was 0.5.

Now, going back to Frosen's case and plugging the corresponding numbers into the equation fee = C × feeRate × (p × (1 - p))^exponent from this anomaly formula. Knowing that C equals 100, meaning Frosen wants to place an order for 100 shares; p equals 0.001, meaning 0.001 USD (0.1 cents); exponent equals 0.5, meaning another power operation on (p × (1 - p)); the final fee rate is 94.8%.
By feeding this to an AI directly, you can reverse-engineer that the feeRate level at that time was around 0.03, while also reconstructing the formula calculation details that Polymarket applied to this order.

In simple terms, Polymarket calculated, based on the anomalous formula, that the fee for this order should be 0.0948 USD. Since Polymarket deducts the corresponding value of shares directly from the buy order, and the share price at the time was only 0.001 USD, it needed to deduct 94.8 shares. Therefore, Frosen would ultimately receive only 5.2 shares, even if the prediction is correct, the potential profit would only be 5.2 USD.
Polymarket Remedial Action
Shortly after the anomalous fee issue arose, Polymarket promptly responded by modifying the formula to its current version, fee = C × feeRate × p × (1 - p). Compared to the anomalous formula, the new formula removed the '^exponent'—effectively raising the exponent parameter from 0.5 to 1 in the anomalous formula fee = C × feeRate × (p × (1 - p))^exponent.
In the anomalous formula, the '^exponent' effect was to perform another power operation on the p × (1-p) data set. In Polymarket's actual operational scenario, the theoretical result range of p × (1 - p) is between '0.000999 - 0.25'—as p approaches 0.5 (shares price approaches $0.5), this data set gets closer to 0.25; when p approaches 0 or 1 (shares price approaches 0 or $1, with extreme quotes at $0.001 and $0.999), this data set gets closer to 0.000999.
Within the '0.000999 - 0.25' range, regardless of the value taken, raising the exponent parameter from 0.5 to 1 directly reduces the final fee result in the formula calculation, thereby decreasing the overall cost.
More importantly, this reduction has a more pronounced inhibitory effect on exceptionally high fees near very low price levels—when p × (1-p) = 0.000999, the fee under the new formula is only about 3.16% of the fee under the anomalous formula, representing a decrease of approximately 96.84%; when p × (1-p) = 0.25, the fee under the new formula is 50% of the fee under the anomalous formula.
As indicated in the Polymarket official documentation, following the implementation of the new formula, fee rates at extremes in the 'Weather' and 'Economics' market categories have now decreased to 5%.

How Can Retail Users Avoid Fees?
I know most users are lazy to look at the above formula, but are also concerned about Polymarket's current fee issue.
In response to this, Mustafa mentioned on the official Discord: "If you're worried about fees, you can place limit orders for free, and after this new update, you can also receive a 20%-25% maker rebate—this means that when your limit order is executed, you will receive 20%-25% of the taker fee, essentially enabling you to not only trade for free but also potentially earn rewards by trading and providing competitive liquidity."
So let's change our habits, try not to market buy directly anymore, switch to using limit orders more often, and you can also try using Polymarket's Split feature more frequently, indirectly build your position by selling the other side of the shares through a reverse limit order.
You may also like

Why can this institution still grow by 150% when the scale of leading crypto VCs has shrunk significantly?

Anthropic's $1 trillion, compared to DeepSeek's $100 billion

Geopolitical Risk Persists, Is Bitcoin Becoming a Key Barometer?

Annualized 11.5%, Wall Street Buzzing: Is MicroStrategy's STRC Bitcoin's Savior or Destroyer?

An Obscure Open Source AI Tool Alerted on Kelp DAO's $292 million Bug 12 Days Ago

Mixin has launched USTD-margined perpetual contracts, bringing derivative trading into the chat scene.
The privacy-focused crypto wallet Mixin announced today the launch of its U-based perpetual contract (a derivative priced in USDT). Unlike traditional exchanges, Mixin has taken a new approach by "liberating" derivative trading from isolated matching engines and embedding it into the instant messaging environment.
Users can directly open positions within the app with leverage of up to 200x, while sharing positions, discussing strategies, and copy trading within private communities. Trading, social interaction, and asset management are integrated into the same interface.
Based on its non-custodial architecture, Mixin has eliminated friction from the traditional onboarding process, allowing users to participate in perpetual contract trading without identity verification.
The trading process has been streamlined into five steps:
· Choose the trading asset
· Select long or short
· Input position size and leverage
· Confirm order details
· Confirm and open the position
The interface provides real-time visualization of price, position, and profit and loss (PnL), allowing users to complete trades without switching between multiple modules.
Mixin has directly integrated social features into the derivative trading environment. Users can create private trading communities and interact around real-time positions:
· End-to-end encrypted private groups supporting up to 1024 members
· End-to-end encrypted voice communication
· One-click position sharing
· One-click trade copying
On the execution side, Mixin aggregates liquidity from multiple sources and accesses decentralized protocol and external market liquidity through a unified trading interface.
By combining social interaction with trade execution, Mixin enables users to collaborate, share, and execute trading strategies instantly within the same environment.
Mixin has also introduced a referral incentive system based on trading behavior:
· Users can join with an invite code
· Up to 60% of trading fees as referral rewards
· Incentive mechanism designed for long-term, sustainable earnings
This model aims to drive user-driven network expansion and organic growth.
Mixin's derivative transactions are built on top of its existing self-custody wallet infrastructure, with core features including:
· Separation of transaction account and asset storage
· User full control over assets
· Platform does not custody user funds
· Built-in privacy mechanisms to reduce data exposure
The system aims to strike a balance between transaction efficiency, asset security, and privacy protection.
Against the background of perpetual contracts becoming a mainstream trading tool, Mixin is exploring a different development direction by lowering barriers, enhancing social and privacy attributes.
The platform does not only view transactions as execution actions but positions them as a networked activity: transactions have social attributes, strategies can be shared, and relationships between individuals also become part of the financial system.
Mixin's design is based on a user-initiated, user-controlled model. The platform neither custodies assets nor executes transactions on behalf of users.
This model aligns with a statement issued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 13, 2026, titled "Staff Statement on Whether Partial User Interface Used in Preparing Cryptocurrency Securities Transactions May Require Broker-Dealer Registration."
The statement indicates that, under the premise where transactions are entirely initiated and controlled by users, non-custodial service providers that offer neutral interfaces may not need to register as broker-dealers or exchanges.
Mixin is a decentralized, self-custodial privacy wallet designed to provide secure and efficient digital asset management services.
Its core capabilities include:
· Aggregation: integrating multi-chain assets and routing between different transaction paths to simplify user operations
· High liquidity access: connecting to various liquidity sources, including decentralized protocols and external markets
· Decentralization: achieving full user control over assets without relying on custodial intermediaries
· Privacy protection: safeguarding assets and data through MPC, CryptoNote, and end-to-end encrypted communication
Mixin has been in operation for over 8 years, supporting over 40 blockchains and more than 10,000 assets, with a global user base exceeding 10 million and an on-chain self-custodied asset scale of over $1 billion.

$600 million stolen in 20 days, ushering in the era of AI hackers in the crypto world

Vitalik's 2026 Hong Kong Web3 Summit Speech: Ethereum's Ultimate Vision as the "World Computer" and Future Roadmap

On the same day Aave introduced rsETH, why did Spark decide to exit?

Full Post-Mortem of the KelpDAO Incident: Why Did Aave, Which Was Not Compromised, End Up in Crisis Situation?

After a $290 million DeFi liquidation, is the security promise still there?

ZachXBT's post ignites RAVE nearing zero, what is the truth behind the insider control?

Vitalik 2026 Hong Kong Web3 Carnival Speech Transcript: We do not compete on speed; security and decentralization are the core

In-depth Analysis of RAVE Events: Short Squeeze, Crash, and Quantitative Financial Models of Liquidity Manipulation

Eve of Ceasefire, US Military Fires on Iranian Vessel | Rewire News Morning Brief

Figma's stock price drops over 7%, will Claude Design be the terminator?

Plunge by 10% Followed by Rebound, Weekend Oil Market Watch

SpaceX Mascot ASTEROID Fast Track $170 million, Stemming from an Unfinished Space Dream
Why can this institution still grow by 150% when the scale of leading crypto VCs has shrunk significantly?
Anthropic's $1 trillion, compared to DeepSeek's $100 billion
Geopolitical Risk Persists, Is Bitcoin Becoming a Key Barometer?
Annualized 11.5%, Wall Street Buzzing: Is MicroStrategy's STRC Bitcoin's Savior or Destroyer?
An Obscure Open Source AI Tool Alerted on Kelp DAO's $292 million Bug 12 Days Ago
Mixin has launched USTD-margined perpetual contracts, bringing derivative trading into the chat scene.
The privacy-focused crypto wallet Mixin announced today the launch of its U-based perpetual contract (a derivative priced in USDT). Unlike traditional exchanges, Mixin has taken a new approach by "liberating" derivative trading from isolated matching engines and embedding it into the instant messaging environment.
Users can directly open positions within the app with leverage of up to 200x, while sharing positions, discussing strategies, and copy trading within private communities. Trading, social interaction, and asset management are integrated into the same interface.
Based on its non-custodial architecture, Mixin has eliminated friction from the traditional onboarding process, allowing users to participate in perpetual contract trading without identity verification.
The trading process has been streamlined into five steps:
· Choose the trading asset
· Select long or short
· Input position size and leverage
· Confirm order details
· Confirm and open the position
The interface provides real-time visualization of price, position, and profit and loss (PnL), allowing users to complete trades without switching between multiple modules.
Mixin has directly integrated social features into the derivative trading environment. Users can create private trading communities and interact around real-time positions:
· End-to-end encrypted private groups supporting up to 1024 members
· End-to-end encrypted voice communication
· One-click position sharing
· One-click trade copying
On the execution side, Mixin aggregates liquidity from multiple sources and accesses decentralized protocol and external market liquidity through a unified trading interface.
By combining social interaction with trade execution, Mixin enables users to collaborate, share, and execute trading strategies instantly within the same environment.
Mixin has also introduced a referral incentive system based on trading behavior:
· Users can join with an invite code
· Up to 60% of trading fees as referral rewards
· Incentive mechanism designed for long-term, sustainable earnings
This model aims to drive user-driven network expansion and organic growth.
Mixin's derivative transactions are built on top of its existing self-custody wallet infrastructure, with core features including:
· Separation of transaction account and asset storage
· User full control over assets
· Platform does not custody user funds
· Built-in privacy mechanisms to reduce data exposure
The system aims to strike a balance between transaction efficiency, asset security, and privacy protection.
Against the background of perpetual contracts becoming a mainstream trading tool, Mixin is exploring a different development direction by lowering barriers, enhancing social and privacy attributes.
The platform does not only view transactions as execution actions but positions them as a networked activity: transactions have social attributes, strategies can be shared, and relationships between individuals also become part of the financial system.
Mixin's design is based on a user-initiated, user-controlled model. The platform neither custodies assets nor executes transactions on behalf of users.
This model aligns with a statement issued by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) on April 13, 2026, titled "Staff Statement on Whether Partial User Interface Used in Preparing Cryptocurrency Securities Transactions May Require Broker-Dealer Registration."
The statement indicates that, under the premise where transactions are entirely initiated and controlled by users, non-custodial service providers that offer neutral interfaces may not need to register as broker-dealers or exchanges.
Mixin is a decentralized, self-custodial privacy wallet designed to provide secure and efficient digital asset management services.
Its core capabilities include:
· Aggregation: integrating multi-chain assets and routing between different transaction paths to simplify user operations
· High liquidity access: connecting to various liquidity sources, including decentralized protocols and external markets
· Decentralization: achieving full user control over assets without relying on custodial intermediaries
· Privacy protection: safeguarding assets and data through MPC, CryptoNote, and end-to-end encrypted communication
Mixin has been in operation for over 8 years, supporting over 40 blockchains and more than 10,000 assets, with a global user base exceeding 10 million and an on-chain self-custodied asset scale of over $1 billion.







