Cointelegraph
DOGE$0.0821 1.85%
TRX$0.3198 1.66%
LINK$7.43 1.22%
ZEC$374.52 16.17%
ADA$0.159 0.37%
XRP$1.09 1.76%
ETH$1,588 4.94%
BTC$61,356 1.89%
XMR$308.90 5.07%
BNB$581.63 0.81%
XLM$0.2025 6.00%
SOL$63.28 3.29%
HYPE$60.31 1.88%

Fees

Cryptocurrency fees can be defined as money (usually in the form of one of the virtual currencies) that is paid as a on top of a transaction. The most common way to charge a fee is by taking a commission, i.e. some percentage from the amount of the transferred money. At the moment, a lot of transactions can be completed without any cryptocurrency fees unless the transaction includes a large amount of data. As miners function as the handler of transactions, they also receive commissions since each new block of the blockchain consists of their operations and, for example, a fee from Bitcoin as well. It is optional to require a commission, but any user that has found a block can include fees by their own choice. In the future, when the rewards for creating a new block will be reduced, miners will get most of their profit directly from the fees.