This guide explains what are the fees on Trust Wallet, how the app shows them, and how network fees differ by blockchain. I tested common flows (sending BTC, moving ETH, and swapping BNB) over several days and describe the patterns I saw. The mobile app itself does not create extra hidden network fees — most charges come from blockchains or third-party providers — but user choices (priority level, wrong network) dramatically affect cost.
And yes, I made mistakes while testing (I once sent a token to the wrong chain) and share those lessons below.
Short version: the wallet displays or forwards the network fee that the blockchain requires. The app typically shows a fee estimate before you confirm a transaction and often presents simple presets (slow/standard/fast) for gas priority on EVM-compatible chains. You can usually change the network (e.g., Ethereum vs a Layer 2) and the app will show the corresponding fee model.
Conceptually there are three fee types you’ll encounter in the app:
Below I show how those play out on specific chains and give steps to control costs.
Bitcoin fees are set at the protocol level and depend on transaction size (vBytes) and network demand. The wallet will typically show a fee estimate when you tap Send and offer priority presets. In my test sends, the app presented a few priority options and the fee differences reflected block congestion.
A couple of practical points:
And yes, always double-check the destination address and the chain before sending. I’ve seen users pay a fee and then realize the destination expects a different token standard.
BNB Chain transactions are typically inexpensive compared with Ethereum. The app displays the gas fee for BEP-20 transfers and swaps in the native BNB token. Because gas costs are low, many small transfers remain practical on this chain.
If you move tokens from an exchange, the exchange’s withdraw fee still applies (this is the amount you pay the exchange to send the token out). For guidance on exchange withdrawals and the steps to send tokens into your mobile wallet see Transfer from Binance and Transfer to exchange.
Ethereum uses EIP-1559: transactions include a base fee (burned) and a priority (tip) paid to miners/validators. Wallets often show a suggested total and let you increase the priority fee to speed up confirmation. In my hands-on tests the app provided simple presets and, in some cases, an advanced edit for gas price or tip.
Layer 2 networks (Optimistic rollups and ZK rollups) and other EVM-compatible L2s can cut per-transaction gas dramatically. If reducing cost is your goal, moving assets to an L2 before frequent swaps will usually save money — but bridging has its own fees and risks. See Cross-chain bridges for security notes.
Transfer fees from an exchange (for example, transfer eth from Binance to Trust Wallet fee) will show two numbers in practice: the exchange’s withdraw fee and then the network fee encoded in the transaction once broadcast. Check both before you confirm the withdrawal on the exchange.
When you buy crypto inside the app the transaction is routed through third-party providers. Those services add processing charges and price spreads. These are not network fees — they are service fees and can be a substantial part of the final cost.
Always review the fee breakdown on the buy screen before confirming. If the screen does not show a clear breakdown, consider using an exchange for larger buys (or compare providers). But for small, immediate purchases the convenience of an in-app buy may make sense.
Step by step: how I lower fees when I send or swap.
But remember: saving a few dollars on gas is not worth risking a wrong network or rushing a contract approval.
Fees and security intersect in a few painful ways:
Who this wallet fits: mobile-first users who want simple multi-chain access, in-app swaps, and staking from a non-custodial app. I’ve been using these workflows daily for months and find the mobile-first UX convenient.
Who should look elsewhere: users who need granular, professional fee control for large-volume trading, or enterprises needing custodial or regulated fiat rails. Also, if you require guaranteed transaction simulation before broadcast, check that the feature is present in your chosen app.
Q: Is it safe to keep crypto in a hot wallet?
A: Hot wallets are convenient but trade some security for usability. Use strong device security, back up your seed phrase offline, and keep large holdings in cold storage when possible. See Backup & recovery.
Q: How do I revoke token approvals?
A: Use the app’s token-approval or a third-party revoke tool (with care). Revoke approvals for tokens you no longer use to reduce drain risk. See Token approvals & revoke.
Q: What happens if I lose my phone?
A: If you have your seed phrase you can restore the wallet on a new device. Without the seed phrase you cannot recover private keys. Always back up the seed phrase securely. See Lost device & recovery.
Q: What are Trust Wallet withdraw fees / transfer fee from Trust Wallet to Binance?
A: When you send from the mobile wallet to an exchange, you pay the blockchain gas fee; the exchange may also charge a deposit/withdrawal policy fee on its side. Check both platforms before confirming.
Q: How much is the transaction fee from Binance to Trust Wallet?
A: The cost equals the exchange’s withdraw fee plus the network fee. The exchange usually displays the withdraw fee when you start a withdrawal. See Transfer from Binance.
Understanding what drives fees (blockchain mechanics, priority/tip, third-party markup) changes behavior: you’ll pick the right chain, time transfers, and spot hidden costs. I suggest practicing with small amounts before moving larger balances. For step-by-step transfer tutorials and fee management tips, see Transfer from Binance, Gas fees management, and Backup & recovery.
If you want a quick walkthrough of sending your first BTC or ETH from an exchange to the app, open the relevant guide above and follow the checklist. Safe transfers.