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  • Market Cap: $2.0681T 0.71%
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  • Market Cap: $2.0681T 0.71%
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How to trade crypto futures on Binance? Why are orders not filling?

To access Binance Futures, log in, go to Derivatives → Futures, choose USDⓈ-M or COIN-M, fund your wallet, and enable 2FA—then trade with up to 125x leverage while monitoring liquidity, funding rates, and mark price for risk control.

Jun 26, 2026 at 11:00 pm

Accessing Binance Futures Interface

1. Log into your Binance account via web or mobile application.

2. Navigate to the top navigation bar and select “Derivatives” → “Futures”.

3. Choose between USDⓈ-M Futures or COIN-M Futures depending on whether you prefer stablecoin-margined or coin-margined contracts.

4. Confirm your futures wallet balance is funded—transfers from spot wallets must be manually initiated.

5. Enable two-factor authentication if not already active, as futures trading requires elevated security protocols.

Placing and Managing Futures Orders

1. Select a trading pair such as BTC/USDT or ETH/USDT from the available list.

2. Choose order type: market, limit, stop-market, stop-limit, or trailing stop.

3. Input leverage value—Binance allows up to 125x for selected pairs, though higher leverage increases liquidation risk.

4. Enter position size in USDT or coin units, then review margin requirements and estimated liquidation price.

5. Click “Buy/Long” or “Sell/Short” to submit the order; execution depends on real-time order book depth.

Liquidity Constraints and Order Fill Failures

1. If an order fails to fill, check the Order Book depth—a spread exceeding 0.8% between best bid and ask signals thin liquidity.

2. Verify 24-hour trading volume for the underlying asset on CoinGecko; values below $500,000 correlate strongly with frequent “insufficient liquidity” errors.

3. Test with a smaller order size—submitting 0.5% of intended notional value often reveals whether slippage thresholds are being breached.

4. Avoid placing large limit orders far from mid-price; such orders may sit unfilled indefinitely due to lack of matching counterparties.

5. Monitor funding rate indicators—extreme positive or negative rates reflect imbalance between long and short positions, which can distort price discovery and delay fills.

Funding Rate Mechanics and Settlement Timing

1. Funding occurs every 8 hours at 00:00, 08:00, and 16:00 UTC on perpetual contracts.

2. The rate is calculated using the difference between mark price and index price, plus an interest component tied to the base asset’s borrowing cost.

3. When funding rate turns sharply positive, longs pay shorts—this incentivizes arbitrage and pulls futures price toward spot levels.

4. Negative funding indicates short dominance and triggers payments from shorts to longs, acting as a counterbalancing force.

5. Persistent divergence between mark and index price beyond 0.3% triggers automatic adjustment mechanisms within Binance’s risk engine.

Common Questions and Direct Answers

Q1: Why does my limit order show “Not enough liquidity to fill order” even when price reaches my level?That error appears when the cumulative size of opposing orders at your specified price is less than your requested quantity—or when the exchange’s internal liquidity validation rejects execution due to anticipated slippage exceeding preset thresholds.

Q2: Can I trade futures without completing KYC verification?No. Binance mandates Level 2 KYC for futures trading, including submission of government-issued ID and proof of address. Unverified accounts cannot access leverage or place derivative orders.

Q3: What happens if my position is liquidated during maintenance downtime?Liquidations proceed automatically regardless of interface availability. Binance’s risk engine operates independently of frontend status—margin calls and forced closures execute based on real-time mark price and collateral ratio.

Q4: Is there a difference between “Mark Price” and “Last Price” on the futures chart?Yes. Last Price reflects the most recent executed trade. Mark Price is a composite derived from index price and funding components—it determines liquidation events and profit/loss calculations to prevent manipulation.

Disclaimer:info@kdj.com

The information provided is not trading advice. kdj.com does not assume any responsibility for any investments made based on the information provided in this article. Cryptocurrencies are highly volatile and it is highly recommended that you invest with caution after thorough research!

If you believe that the content used on this website infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately (info@kdj.com) and we will delete it promptly.

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