NEAR Intents Fees — How Cross-Chain Swap Pricing Works | NearStats
Last updated: 2026-06-16 00:00 UTC · Source: NEAR Intents Explorer
NEAR Intents fees are driven by solver competition rather than a fixed bridge fee. Solvers quote to fill each intent and the best price wins, so users pay the winning solver's spread plus any app/affiliate fee an integrator adds.
How NEAR Intents pricing works
- Solver spread — the main cost; minimized by competition.
- App/affiliate fee — optional, set by the integrator routing the swap.
- No bridge fee — no lock-and-mint bridge, so no separate bridge toll or wrapped-asset risk.
For the current fee model and exact parameters, see the official NEAR Intents documentation. NearStats tracks live referral and affiliate activity.
Frequently asked questions
- How much does a NEAR Intents swap cost?
- Pricing on NEAR Intents is set by solver competition: solvers quote to fill a user's intent and the best quote wins, so the effective cost is the spread the winning solver charges plus any protocol/app fee. Because solvers compete, users typically receive competitive cross-chain rates.
- How does NEAR Intents make money?
- NEAR Intents settlements can carry an app/affiliate fee that integrators set, and solvers earn the spread between the price they quote and the price they source liquidity at. NearStats tracks referral and affiliate activity on its leaderboard.
- Are there bridging fees?
- Because NEAR Intents uses solvers rather than a lock-and-mint bridge, users avoid traditional bridge fees and wrapped-asset risk; costs are expressed in the quoted swap rate.