Fee Overview
Live Kaspa fee rates and recent transaction fees across the network
What is this?
This page is a live snapshot of Kaspa's fee market. It shows what the network recommends right now and what users have actually been paying over the last minute, hour, and 24 hours — all in one compact view.
Fee Rates show the recommended rate for low, normal, and priority transactions. These values tell you how aggressively you need to bid if you want faster inclusion. Under quiet network conditions, all three numbers are often the same because there is plenty of available block space.
Average Fee shows the typical fee paid per transaction over rolling 1-minute, 1-hour, and 24-hour windows. Total Fees shows how much was paid in total across the whole network over those same windows. Together, they give a quick read on both per-send cost and overall fee activity.
For historical trends over longer periods, see the dedicated Total Fees and Average Fee chart pages in the sidebar.
How to use this data
If you are sending a normal transaction, start here. In most cases, the low or normal fee rate is enough on Kaspa because the network usually has ample capacity. If the priority rate moves noticeably above the others, demand for block space may be rising and faster confirmation may require a higher fee.
Watch the 1-minute columns for immediate changes and the 24-hour columns for the daily baseline. A short spike in the 1-minute values may reflect a temporary burst of demand; elevated 24-hour values suggest a busier day across the network.
Fee rates are shown in sompi per gram — the unit wallets and nodes use when setting fees. Average and total amounts are shown in KAS for readability.
How it's computed
Fee rates come from the node's live fee estimator, which recommends low, normal, and priority pricing based on current network conditions.
Average and total fee values are based on fees actually paid by transactions accepted on-chain — real usage, not estimates. Rolling windows of 1 minute, 1 hour, and 24 hours are updated continuously from recent transaction fee data.
In simple terms, fee rates tell you what the network is asking for right now; the rolling tables tell you what users have really been paying recently. Historical line charts on separate pages extend those same metrics over longer time ranges.