Bybit is making a direct play for more stablecoin trading volume. The exchange said it is cutting fees on USDC-denominated spot and futures pairs for eligible VIP users, while also tweaking its liquidity framework in a way designed to make those markets deeper and more competitive.
The changes took effect on March 23 and apply to USDC spot and futures markets on the platform. They do not affect Pro fee structures or non-USDC pairs. On the surface, the announcement is about cheaper trading. In practice, it looks like a broader attempt to make USDC a more active part of Bybit’s trading stack at a time when exchanges are competing harder for stablecoin-based volume.
What exactly is changing?
For eligible VIP users trading manually, Bybit is reducing taker fees on USDC-denominated pairs by as much as 50%. On the spot side, taker fees across all VIP tiers are being cut in half, with Supreme VIP users seeing rates as low as 0.0225%. On the futures side, eligible VIPs also get a 50% cut, with Supreme VIP fees dropping to 0.015%. Bybit is also leaning on infrastructure changes it began rolling out earlier this year. In February, the exchange introduced a dedicated USDC futures fee group, separating those contracts into their own framework. Now it is pushing that further by strengthening the way those markets are assessed internally. The company has increased the weighting factor for the USDC group in its market maker performance model from 5x to 8x. That matters because it gives market makers more reason to focus on USDC books, which can translate into tighter spreads and better depth if the incentive works as intended.Investor Takeaway
This is a liquidity play, not just a fee tweak. Bybit is trying to make USDC trading cheaper for active users while making the market more attractive for liquidity providers at the same time.
Why USDC matters more now
Stablecoins are no longer just parking tools. They have become core market infrastructure across spot trading, derivatives collateral, cross-exchange settlement and onchain finance. That shift is one reason exchanges are paying more attention to how specific stablecoins are positioned inside their ecosystems. USDC, in particular, carries a different profile from some of its rivals. It is widely used across regulated fintech rails, institutional desks and payment-linked crypto services. For an exchange like Bybit, deepening USDC activity is not only about current trading demand. It is also about making the platform more useful to users who increasingly move between trading, treasury management and stablecoin settlement. Lower fees help with that, but so does liquidity. If traders see better pricing and execution in USDC pairs, more of that flow can stay on the exchange instead of moving elsewhere.Can lower fees actually shift market share?
They can, especially in segments where active users care about basis points and execution quality. High-volume traders and market makers tend to notice small changes quickly, and once a venue becomes cheaper and easier to trade on, volume can build on itself. That is likely the logic behind combining fee cuts with the new weighting adjustment. Cutting fees alone may attract attention, but rewarding market makers more aggressively helps support the order books behind that demand. Without that second piece, cheaper trading can still feel expensive if liquidity is thin or slippage is high. Bybit is effectively trying to improve both sides of the equation at once: user-facing costs and behind-the-scenes market quality.Investor Takeaway
Watch whether exchanges start competing more directly around stablecoin-specific trading rails. If USDC liquidity becomes a bigger battleground, fee structures may become more segmented by asset group.




