CHIP Funding Rate Today
Current CHIP funding across major exchanges, including advertised APR, model-adjusted apr, and Mirage context.
CHIP funding is currently positive across tracked venues, but model-adjusted APR remains materially below the headline annualized signal.
Current CHIP funding by exchange
Mirage is elevated, meaning a large share of headline annualized funding may fail to survive execution conditions.
Advertised APR is annualized from current funding. Model-Adjusted APR is a public estimate after Mirage and execution-aware adjustments.
See Binance funding indexFunding rate is the periodic transfer between longs and shorts in perpetual futures. A positive annualized rate can still degrade materially once fees, decay, and crowding are applied.
Read methodologyReview funding rate riskValidation status for this public metric.
Supported means stronger observed coverage. Calibration and exploratory indicate weaker empirical depth.
CHIP Funding Rate FAQ
What is the current CHIP funding rate?
The average CHIP funding rate across major exchanges is 837.0% advertised APR. After model adjustments for execution reality, the survivable APR is approximately 172.5%.
Which exchange has the best CHIP funding rate?
Currently, Binance offers the best model-adjusted APR for CHIP perpetual futures funding. This accounts for execution costs, decay, and crowding effects that reduce headline yields.
How much of CHIP funding yield actually survives?
The current Mirage for CHIP is 75.1%, meaning approximately 24.9% of the headline annualized funding survives execution reality. Mirage accounts for fees, basis drag, decay, and crowding.
When is the next CHIP funding payment?
Funding payments occur at fixed intervals: Binance: 8h, Bybit: 4h, OKX: 4h. The exact next payment time depends on the exchange, but perpetual futures funding typically settles every 8 hours on most venues.
What factors affect CHIP perpetual futures funding?
CHIP funding rates are driven by the balance between long and short positions, spot-perpetual basis, market sentiment, and leverage demand. High positive funding indicates bullish crowding; negative funding suggests bearish pressure.