Limit orders and market orders are the two most fundamental order types in crypto trading. Simply put, market orders prioritize execution speed while limit orders prioritize execution price.
What Is a Market Order?
A market order executes immediately at the best available price. You don't specify a price — the system matches against the best counterparty in the order book.

Characteristics:
- Fills almost instantly
- No price setting needed, simple operation
- Guarantees execution, but not execution price
- Taker order (takes existing liquidity from the order book)
What Is a Limit Order?
A limit order specifies a target price and only fills when the market reaches or exceeds that price.
Characteristics:
- Precise price control
- May not fill immediately — could take time
- Guarantees price, but not guaranteed fill
- Usually a Maker order (provides liquidity)
Example: BTC is at 65,000 USDT. You set a limit buy at 64,000. Your order only fills if BTC drops to 64,000.
Core Differences
Speed: Market = instant; Limit = depends on market movement
Price control: Market = no control; Limit = price won't be worse than your setting
Slippage: Market = slippage risk (especially large orders/low liquidity); Limit = no slippage
Fees: Market = Taker rate (higher); Limit = Maker rate (lower/discounted)

When to Use Market Orders?
- Emergency stop-loss: Quick exit during crashes
- Chasing breakouts: Immediate entry on key level breaks
- Small trades: Negligible slippage for small amounts
- High-liquidity pairs: BTC/USDT, ETH/USDT have minimal slippage
- Uncertain about price: When you're not sure what price to buy at
When to Use Limit Orders?
- Clear target price: You've analyzed a reasonable entry/exit point
- Large orders: Market orders on large amounts cause significant slippage
- Low-liquidity tokens: Small tokens have thin order books
- DCA: Set multiple limit buys at different price levels
- Take profit: Set limit sells at your target price
- While away: Set-and-forget automated execution
Practical Selection Guide
Building positions: Small test buys = market order; Planned DCA = limit orders
Holding: Take profit = limit sell; Stop loss = stop-market order
Exiting: Planned exit = limit; Emergency exit = market
Visit Binance to practice with different order types.
Security Reminders
- Avoid large market orders in extreme volatility: Slippage can be severe
- Check pending orders regularly: Stale limit orders may no longer make sense
- Always plan stop-loss: Regardless of order type
- Beware of fake order book walls: Large visible orders may be traps
- Double-check before submitting: Verify price, quantity, and direction
- Use official platforms: Binance Official App (Apple users, refer to the iOS Installation Guide)
Limit Order Not Filling?
Market hasn't reached your price. Cancel and re-place closer to current price, or use market order.
Will Market Orders Buy at a Terrible Price?
On liquid pairs like BTC/USDT, the gap is minimal. On illiquid tokens or extreme conditions, market orders can fill far above expectations.
How Much Difference Between Maker and Taker Fees?
Varies by exchange. Binance: 0.1% for both (standard). With BNB discount: 0.075%. VIP Maker can be as low as 0.02%.
Can I Place Multiple Limit Orders?
Yes. Place multiple limit buys/sells at different prices for DCA/scaling out. Each freezes corresponding funds.