Binance describes Futures Grid as a bot that places buy and sell orders at preset intervals inside a configured price range. The feature is designed for volatile, sideways markets where price repeatedly moves through levels rather than trending in one direction. That makes the first decision the range, not the leverage.
A practical workflow starts on the Binance Futures page: choose Strategy Trading, open Futures Grid, select the contract pair, then decide whether to use Auto parameters or Manual settings. In manual mode, traders need to choose direction. Neutral grids try to trade both sides of a range; long grids begin with bullish exposure; short grids begin with bearish exposure.
The next settings are grid type and price boundaries. Arithmetic grids use equal price gaps, while geometric grids use equal percentage spacing. A tight grid can trade more often but leaves less profit per order after fees. A wide grid trades less often but gives each fill more room. Neither choice removes the need to know where the strategy is wrong.
Before pressing create, check leverage, margin mode, available balance, estimated liquidation price, take-profit and stop-loss settings. Grid bots can feel automatic, but they do not make the market less risky. A strong trend through the lower or upper boundary can turn a range strategy into a directional loss, especially when leverage is high.
Risk notice: This article is educational and is not official support or investment advice. Futures grid trading uses derivatives and may cause rapid losses, including liquidation, if the market moves against the position.
Sources: Binance FAQ: What Is Futures Grid Trading?; Binance step-by-step Futures Grid guide; Binance Bot Marketplace FAQ.
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