What is slippage? Why the price you see and the price you get can drift apart
This page is maintained by the Binance Wiki - Platform Guides and Rule Explainers editorial team and cross-checked against platform rules, product docs and internal topic pages.
If platform rules change, treat the official documentation as the final source of truth.
Definition and role
Explains what slippage means and how volatility, depth and order method can create a gap between the expected price and the final execution price.
What is slippage? Why the price you see and the price you get can drift apart works better as a decision checkpoint in the Binance journey than as an isolated term.
The practical approach is to understand the concept first, then decide whether it changes your current signup, trading, wallet or security action.
Why it matters before the next step
- It can change how you read the page wording, the fee logic, the risk boundary or the next action.
- If the concept stays fuzzy, later route choices, rule checks and review steps become harder to judge.
- Understanding the term before you move on is usually faster than troubleshooting after the flow is already mixed up.
Checks before you continue
- Confirm that the concept is directly related to your current task instead of reacting to the label alone.
- Review whether it changes the entry page, cost wording, permission limit, transfer route or security decision.
- Then go back to the live Binance page and treat the current rule, eligibility and prompt wording as the final reference.
Related reading
- Binance Convert vs Spot: speed, price visibility and when each route fits
- How to buy USDT on Binance: payment methods, costs and network checks
- How to buy BTC on Binance: choose the route, estimate cost and plan custody
Facts checked on 2026-04-21.