Slippage is the difference between the price you expect on a trade and the price at which it actually executes. It is common in crypto, driven mostly by volatility and thin liquidity, and can work for or against you. This guide explains it.
How slippage happens
Slippage occurs when the market price moves between the moment you place an order and the moment it actually fills [1]. Negative slippage means a worse price than expected (you intended to buy at $50 but filled at $52); positive slippage means a better price (filled at $48). Both come from price movement in that short window [2].
Why it happens
How to reduce slippage
Trade pairs with deep liquidity, avoid large market orders during sharp volatility, split big orders when needed, and set a sensible "slippage tolerance" to cap the price deviation you'll accept. Many trading interfaces let you customize this limit per trade.
The bottom line
Slippage is the gap between your expected and executed price, shaped by volatility, liquidity, and order size. Understanding its causes and using slippage tolerance helps you control your fills. To keep learning the fundamentals, follow more from Bitbase Academy.
Disclaimer: This article is educational content from Bitbase Academy, provided for information only. It does not constitute investment, trading, tax, or financial advice. Written as of June 2026; refer to the latest official information.
References
[1] Kraken, "What is slippage in crypto?" kraken.com
[2] Coinbase, "What is slippage in crypto and how to minimize its impact?" coinbase.com






