How funding rates work across 1h, 4h, and 8h intervals — when to enter, what APR to expect, what negative funding means, and how to protect against reversals. With real numbers.
Perpetual futures contracts never expire — unlike traditional futures. To keep the perpetual price anchored to the spot price, exchanges use a funding rate mechanism: a periodic fee paid between long and short traders.
When the perpetual price is above spot (bullish market), funding is positive — longs pay shorts. When it's below spot (bearish market), funding is negative — shorts pay longs.
This fee is not paid to the exchange. It flows directly between traders. This is the key insight funding rate arbitrage is built on.
Different exchanges settle funding at different intervals. This affects how often you collect — and how you compare rates across exchanges.
To compare rates fairly, always annualize them:
Exchange reference — which interval each major exchange uses:
| Exchange | Interval | Settlement Times (UTC) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Binance | 8h | 00:00 / 08:00 / 16:00 | Most liquid, default choice |
| Bybit | 8h | 00:00 / 08:00 / 16:00 | Same schedule as Binance |
| Gate.io | 8h | 00:00 / 08:00 / 16:00 | Good for altcoins |
| OKX | 1h | Every hour | More frequent, smaller per payment |
| Bitget | 8h | 00:00 / 08:00 / 16:00 | Some pairs differ |
| dYdX | 1h | Every hour | Decentralized, higher rates possible |
Always check the exchange's funding page directly — intervals can vary per contract.
The strategy is simple and market-neutral. You open two opposite positions simultaneously:
Because the two positions cancel each other out, you have zero price exposure. If BTC drops 20%, your spot loss is offset by your short profit. Your only income is the funding fee collected every interval.
This is also called a cash-and-carry trade or delta-neutral strategy. It works as long as funding stays positive.
Let's run the numbers on a $1,000 position at different funding intervals:
Note: These are gross returns. Always subtract maker/taker fees (typically 0.02–0.05% per entry/exit) and any borrowing fees if using leverage.
A negative funding rate means the perpetual futures price is trading below the spot price. This happens during strong bearish sentiment — when more traders are shorting than going long.
In this scenario, the direction reverses: shorts pay longs. If you are holding a short position (as in the standard strategy), you are now the one paying — not collecting.
Most traders treat negative funding as a signal to exit. But experienced arbitrageurs use it differently:
When funding is strongly negative (e.g. −0.05% or lower), you can flip the trade: short spot (borrow and sell) + long the perpetual. Now you collect the funding fee that shorts are paying. This requires margin borrowing on the spot side and is more complex — suitable only for experienced traders.
Key signals that funding is turning negative:
Always monitor funding before each settlement. ArbVertex Telegram bot alerts you automatically when rates approach dangerous levels.
Entry conditions (all must be true):
Exit conditions (any one triggers exit):
Check funding rates 30 minutes before each settlement window. For 8h exchanges (Binance, Bybit), that means checking at 07:30, 15:30, and 23:30 UTC.