Copy Trading Fees Explained: What You Actually Pay
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Copy Trading Fees Explained: What You Actually Pay

By: Roberto Rojas

Published: 1 April 2026,10:00

Published: 1 April 2026,10:00

Basic Forex EducationBeginnerCopy TradingHow-toTrading BasicsTrading KnowledgeWhat-is

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Copy trading fees include spreads on each trade, overnight swap charges, and a profit-sharing percentage paid to your signal provider.

PU Prime charges no management fees or zero subscription fees.

The minimum deposit to open an account is $50.

The minimum trading capital per signal provider is $25.

Profit-sharing is capped at 50% and settled every Saturday.

Key Takeaways

  • Copy trading fees include spreads on every trade, overnight swap charges, and a profit-sharing percentage paid to your signal provider.
  • PU Prime charges zero management fees and zero subscription fees. There is no monthly cost to access copy trading.
  • Profit-sharing on PU Prime is capped at 50%, calculated using the High Water Mark method — you only pay on genuine new gains.
  • The minimum account deposit is $50. The minimum trading capital per signal provider is $25 — two separate figures with different meanings.
  • Settlements happen automatically every Saturday or immediately when you stop copying or make a withdrawal.
  • Knowing your fee structure before you start lets you filter signal providers by real net return — not just gross ROI.

Copy trading is not free, but the costs are completely predictable once you know what each one is.

The part that catches most people off guard is not the spreads or the swap fees.

It is the profit-sharing ratio.

A signal provider showing 40% gross returns with a 50% profit-sharing ratio can leave you with less than one showing 25% returns at a 15% ratio.

The numbers look very different once you do the math.

This guide breaks down every fee type in plain language, provides a real-world example with actual dollar figures, and explains how to use PU Prime’s fee structure to your advantage when choosing who to copy.

If you are still deciding whether copy trading is the right approach for you, the “Is copy trading profitable guide” covers what realistic returns actually look like before fees come into the picture.

You will also find a simple net return formula, a comparison of PU Prime’s fee structure against competitors, and five practical steps to keep your costs low.

If you’re new to copy trading, the beginner’s step-by-step guide covers account setup before fees.

What Fees Are Involved in Copy Trading?

Copy trading has five possible fee types. Some apply to every platform.

Others — such as management and subscription fees — are charged by some brokers but not by PU Prime.

Here is what each one means and how it affects you.

5 Types of Copy Trading Fees | PU Prime
5 Types of Copy Trading Fees

1. Spreads

The spread is the difference between the buy price (ask) and the sell price (bid) for an asset.

Every trade carries this cost, and it’s built into the price rather than listed as a separate charge.

If EUR/USD has a spread of 1.2 pips, you start each trade 1.2 pips behind the market before you’ve made a single cent.

Spreads narrow during busy trading sessions — the London–New York overlap, for example — and widen during off-peak hours or sharp market moves.

The more frequently your signal provider trades, the more spread costs build up over a month.

This is one reason why evaluating trader metrics carefully includes looking at trade frequency, not just returns.

2. Commissions

Some brokers charge a per-lot fee on top of the spread, known as a commission.

This is common on ECN or raw-spread account types.

With PU Prime’s copy trading accounts, there is no per-lot commission.

Your trading cost is determined solely by the spread.

3. Overnight Swap Fees (Rollover Fees)

Any position held past the daily market close — usually 5 pm New York time — is subject to a swap fee (also called a rollover fee).

This fee reflects the interest rate difference between the two currencies or assets in the trade.

Swap fees can be positive or negative: some positions earn a small overnight credit, others pay a small charge.

If your signal provider regularly holds positions for multiple days, swap costs can accumulate meaningfully across a month.

4. Profit-Sharing Fees

Profit-sharing is the cost that is unique to copy trading.

When your signal provider earns money in your account, you pay them a percentage of that profit.

With PU Prime, each signal provider sets their own ratio, up to 50%. You can see this ratio before you copy anyone.

If a provider sets a 30% ratio and earns you $200, they receive $60, and you keep $140.

Crucially, profit-sharing is charged only on real new gains — not on periods when the provider is recovering from a loss.

This is how the High Water Mark method works, explained in detail in the next section.

5. Management Fees and Subscription Fees

Some copy trading platforms charge a monthly subscription fee (typically $0–$30 per month) or an annual management fee based on your account balance.

PU Prime charges neither. Access to copy trading is free.

The only costs you pay come from actual trading activity — spreads, applicable swap charges, and profit-sharing

How Does PU Prime’s Fee Structure Work?

PU Prime’s copy trading fee structure is transparent and low-cost. There are no hidden charges.

The table below shows exactly what applies — and what does not.

Fee TypeDoes it apply to PU Prime?Detail
Subscription feeNone — ZeroNever charged
Management feeNone — ZeroNever charged
CommissionsNoneNot charged on copy trading accounts
SpreadsYesBuilt into every trade; varies by asset and account type
Overnight swap feesYes (can be + or −)Charged when positions are held past 5 pm NY time
Profit-sharingYes (up to 50%)Paid on real new gains only; settled every Saturday

Two figures matter for cost planning that are often confused:

  • Minimum account deposit: $50 — the amount needed to open a PU Prime account and access copy trading.
  • Minimum trading capital per signal provider: $25 — the minimum you need to allocate to any single trader you copy.

    With a $100 allocation, you could copy up to four different signal providers simultaneously.

What Is Profit-Sharing in Copy Trading?

Profit-sharing is the percentage of your gains that you pay to the signal provider whose trades you copy. It is only charged when the provider earns money for you.

The ratio is set by the provider (up to 50%) and is visible on their profile before you commit to copying them.

Settlements happen automatically every Saturday — or immediately if you stop copying or withdraw funds mid-week.

What Is the High Water Mark Method?

The High Water Mark is a rule that prevents you from paying profit-sharing on the same gains twice.

Say your allocation grows from $1,000 to $1,200 — that $1,200 is your new high water mark.

If the provider then has a losing period and your balance drops to $1,050, they earn nothing on that loss.

They only resume profit-sharing once your balance climbs above $1,200 for the first time.

This means you never pay fees on recoveries.

You only pay when the provider delivers genuine new growth above your previous peak.

It is one of the most trader-friendly fee structures in copy trading.

To understand how to evaluate profit-sharing ratios when comparing signal providers on PU Prime, the guide to picking the best traders to copy walks through exactly how to filter by net profitability, not just headline returns.

How Do Copy Trading Costs Compare Across Platforms?

Copy trading on PU Prime is significantly cheaper at the access level than most alternatives.

The table below compares PU Prime with a typical competitor copy-trading platform and a traditional managed fund, such as a hedge fund or robo-advisor.

Fee TypePU PrimeTypical Competitor PlatformTraditional Managed Fund
Subscription feeNone — $0$0–$30 per monthN/A
Management feeNone — $00–2% per year1–2% per year
Profit-sharingUp to 50% (provider sets it)10–50%15–25% (performance fee)
SpreadsYes — competitiveYesIncluded in the management fee
CommissionsNoneVaries by account typeIncluded in the management fee
Minimum deposit$50 account / $25 per trader$100–$500$10,000+

Is copy trading cheaper than hiring a fund manager? Yes — significantly.

A traditional managed fund typically requires $10,000 or more to open, charges 1–2% annually just to hold your money, and adds a 15–25% performance fee on top.

With PU Prime, your minimum deposit is $50, you pay zero annual management fee, and profit-sharing applies only when you actually profit.

Choosing the right platform affects your long-term cost as much as choosing the right signal provider.

The copy trading platform guide covers what else to look for beyond fees.

How Fees Affect Your Actual Returns (Real Example)

The worked example below uses realistic figures.

The purpose is not to predict what you will earn — results vary — but to show how each fee type reduces your gross profit in sequence, so you can plan around it.

Example Setup
Starting allocation: $1,000
Signal provider’s gross return for the month: 20% ($200 profit)
Profit-sharing ratio: 30%
Trade frequency: Moderate — around 40 trades in the month
Average spread: 1.5 pips per trade
Overnight positions: 30% of trades held past the daily close

How Fees Affect Your Actual Returns | PU Prime
How Fees Affect Your Actual Returns

Step 1 — Gross Profit: $200

Your signal provider earns 20% on your $1,000 allocation — $200 gross profit before any deductions.

This is the number most people focus on, but it is not the number that hits your account.

Step 2 — Spread Costs (Estimated $15–$20)

At 40 trades with an average spread of 1.5 pips on a $1,000 proportional allocation, estimated spread costs come to around $15–$20 for the month.

This is an estimate — your actual cost depends on the asset traded, account type, and number of trades.

Step 3 — Overnight Swap Fees (Estimated $8–$12)

If 30% of trades are held overnight, you might see swap charges of $8–$12 for the month.

Swap rates vary by asset and can occasionally be positive (a credit) rather than a deduction.

Step 4 — Profit-Sharing: $60

At a 30% profit-sharing ratio, the signal provider takes $60 of your $200 gross profit.

This is the largest single fee in this example — bigger than spreads and swaps combined.

If you had chosen a provider with a 15% ratio instead, the deduction would have been $30, not $60.

Your Net Return

$200 − $18 (spreads) − $10 (swaps) − $60 (profit-share) = $112 net return

Net Return Formula

Net Return = Gross Profit − Spread Costs − Swap Fees − Profit-Sharing

Applied to this example: $200 − $18 − $10 − $60 = $112  (11.2% net on $1,000)

Use this formula to compare signal providers by net return, not gross return.

Change the profit-sharing figure to see how ratio selection changes your outcome.

An 11.2% net return is solid — but the comparison is what matters.

A provider with 40% gross returns and a 50% profit-sharing ratio delivers about 18% net (before spreads and swaps).

A provider with 25% gross and a 10% profit-sharing ratio delivers about 21% net. The lower gross earner keeps more of your money.

For a deeper look at reading signal-provider data — including how to spot providers whose gross returns disguise high costs — the guide to copy-trading profitability explains what realistic returns actually look like across different market conditions.

5 Practical Ways to Keep Your Copy Trading Costs Low

You cannot eliminate copy trading fees, but you can manage them.

These five steps have the most impact on your net return.

1. Filter Signal Providers by Net Return, Not Gross Return

The profit-sharing ratio determines how much of every dollar of profit you actually keep.

A 10–20% ratio is considered low; most of your gains stay with you.

A 30–40% ratio is mid-range and still fair if the provider’s performance justifies it.

A 45–50% ratio is high — you would need a significantly better gross return to justify paying nearly half your profits to the signal provider.

Before copying anyone, check the ratio on their PU Prime profile.

Then apply the formula above.

The provider with the highest net return after fees — not the highest gross return — is the one worth following.

2. Pay Attention to Trade Frequency (Quality over Quantity)

Every trade carries a spread cost.

A signal provider who opens 100 trades in a month costs you more in spreads than one who opens 20 well-chosen trades — even if their overall performance is similar.

When comparing two providers with similar track records, the lower-frequency one is often the cheaper choice on a net basis.

You can check the average trade frequency on the provider’s profile.

For a full guide on what other numbers to review, see the copy trading metrics and red flags guide.

3. Check How Often Positions Are Held Overnight

Swap fees are small on individual trades but add up quickly when positions are held for multiple days, especially on higher-leverage trades or instruments with high overnight interest rates (e.g., some exotic currency pairs and leveraged commodities).

Check a signal provider’s average trade duration on their profile.

If they regularly hold positions for two to five days or more, factor overnight swap charges into your return estimate before you copy them.

3. Check How Often Positions Are Held Overnight

Swap fees are small on individual trades but add up quickly when positions are held for multiple days, especially on higher-leverage trades or instruments with high overnight interest rates (e.g., some exotic currency pairs and leveraged commodities).

Check a signal provider’s average trade duration on their profile.

If they regularly hold positions for two to five days or more, factor overnight swap charges into your return estimate before you copy them.

4. Match Your Account Type to Your Needs

PU Prime offers different account types with different spread structures.

If you are copy trading with a larger allocation — $500 or more — it is worth reviewing which account type offers the tightest spreads on the assets your signal provider trades most often.

Tighter spreads across dozens of trades each month can make a meaningful difference to your annual net return.

5. Build Fee Costs Into Your Signal Provider Filter From Day One

When browsing signal providers with PU Prime, you can see the profit-sharing ratio before you copy anyone.

Treat this like a second performance metric.

Ask yourself: after removing this provider’s ratio from their returns, is the net result still competitive with other providers I’m considering?

This single habit — filtering by net return rather than gross — is the most effective cost management tool available to copy traders.

For a structured way to build this into your selection process, the guide to identifying the best traders to copy lays out a full evaluation framework

Frequently Asked Questions

Is copy trading free?

Copy trading is not completely free.

Every platform involves at least a spread — the built-in gap between the buy and sell prices on each trade.

Overnight swap fees also apply when positions are held past the market close.

With PU Prime, both management and subscription fees are zero.

You only pay for costs incurred from actual trading activity.

What is profit-sharing in copy trading?

Profit-sharing is the percentage of your profits you pay to the signal provider whose trades you copy.

With PU Prime, each provider can set the ratio to up to 50%, and it is visible on their profile before you commit.

It is only charged when the provider earns money for you — not during flat or losing periods.

Settlements happen every Saturday.

How much does PU Prime charge for copy trading?

PU Prime charges no subscription fees and no management fees for copy trading.

Your costs are limited to spreads on each trade, applicable overnight swap fees, and profit-sharing paid to the signal provider (up to 50% of profits, settled weekly using the High Water Mark method).

The minimum account deposit is $50, and the minimum trading capital per signal provider is $25.

Do copy traders pay commissions?

With PU Prime’s copy trading accounts, there is no per-lot commission.

Your trading cost comes from the spread — the built-in gap between buy and sell prices — rather than a separate commission line.

Some brokers charge commissions on ECN or raw-spread accounts.

Always check the fee schedule of any platform before opening an account.

Are there hidden fees in copy trading?

With PU Prime, there are no hidden fees. Spreads are shown in the trading terminal for every instrument. Profit-sharing ratios are displayed on each signal provider’s profile before you copy them.

Swap rates are published in the contract specifications for every asset.

There are no account maintenance fees, inactivity fees, or subscription charges.

What happens to fees if my signal provider makes no profit?

If your signal provider does not make a profit in a given week, no profit-sharing is charged — zero.

The High Water Mark method also means that if the provider has a losing period and then recovers, you do not pay profit-sharing on the gains from that recovery.

Profit-sharing only applies when the provider’s performance pushes your balance to a new all-time high above the previous settlement mark.

Can I avoid swap fees in copy trading?

Swap fees apply when positions are held past the daily market close at 5 pm New York time.

If your signal provider rarely holds trades overnight, swap charges will be minimal.

PU Prime also offers an Islamic account option for traders who need swap-free conditions for religious reasons — check out PU Prime account for details on how this applies to copy trading allocations.

What is the High Water Mark method in copy trading?

The High Water Mark method ensures you only pay profit-sharing on genuine new gains.

Each week, the platform records your account’s highest balance.

The provider only earns profit-sharing when your balance exceeds the previous peak.

If you have a losing week followed by a recovery week, you pay nothing on the recovery.

This prevents double-charging on the same gains.

When is profit-sharing deducted on PU Prime?

Profit-sharing with PU Prime is settled automatically every Saturday.

If you stop copying a signal provider before Saturday, or if you withdraw funds from your copy trading allocation mid-week, settlement is triggered immediately at that point.

The deduction is calculated on the net new gains since the last settlement and is reflected in your account balance right away.

If I copy three signal providers, do I pay fees three times?

Yes — but only when each individual provider makes you money.

Each copy trading allocation is treated independently.

If Provider A earns you a profit, you pay their profit-sharing ratio on those gains.

If Provider B has a losing week, you pay nothing for that allocation.

If Provider C breaks even, nothing is charged either. Fees are per-provider and per-performance, not per-account.

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