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EMA fast/slow crossover strategy on Binance
Catch sustained moves by going long when the fast EMA crosses above the slow EMA.
Is the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy the best on Binance?
There's no universal answer. Whether the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy is the 'best' on Binance depends on the pair you trade, the timeframe, the period, and β critically β Binance's trading fees. A strategy that looks great on a fee-free chart can bleed out once Binance's real costs are applied.
So instead of a number we can't honestly promise, this page gives you the strategy's exact mechanics, what Binance's fees and data mean for it, and how to run the backtest yourself on real BTC/USDT history β then read the robustness score to see whether the edge survives out-of-sample, not just in a curve-fit.
How the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy works
Entry
- Enter long the bar after EMA(12) crosses above EMA(26).
- Cooldown of 2 bars after an exit prevents instant whipsaw re-entries.
Exit
- Close on the down-cross: EMA(12) back below EMA(26).
- Trailing stop of 4% locks in profits if the cross reverses without a clean down-cross.
Indicators it uses
Want the full rules, runnable YAML and expected behaviour? See the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy page β
Running the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy on Binance
Here's what matters when you take this strategy to Binance specifically β the markets it supports, its trading fees, and how good its historical data is for an honest backtest.
- Spot trading
- Supported
- Futures / perps
- Supported
- Maker fee (spot)
- 0.10%
- Historical data
- First-class (deep, reliable)
What Binance's fees do to this strategy
Binance's spot maker fee is 0.10%, so a full round-trip costs roughly 0.20% before slippage. For the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy that's a smaller factor β it holds positions longer, so fees are diluted across bigger moves. Fee drag is the difference between an edge that survives live and one that only existed on a zero-fee chart β so always backtest with Binance's real costs switched on.
How to backtest the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy on Binance
- 1Open the strategy in the visual builder β no code β or start from the EMA fast/slow crossover template and adjust the thresholds to your taste.
- 2Set the symbol to a Binance-listed pair like BTC/USDT, pick your timeframe, and enable realistic fees so the test reflects Binance's actual 0.10% maker cost.
- 3Run the backtest over years of history, then read the robustness score β walk-forward and out-of-sample β to see whether the edge holds up beyond the period you happened to pick.
Frequently asked
- Does the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy work on Binance?
- Mechanically, yes β the indicators it uses are computed from Binance's OHLCV candles like on any other venue. Whether it's profitable on Binance is exactly what a backtest with the right fees is for; don't assume, measure.
- What's the best timeframe for this on Binance?
- There isn't a single answer β it's a parameter to test, not guess. Run the strategy across several timeframes on BTC/USDT and compare the robustness scores rather than the raw returns, which flatter whichever timeframe you over-fit.
- Can I run this live on Binance?
- Noon Barbari is a backtesting and validation platform; live real-money execution is testnet-only by design today. You can connect Binance API keys for data and paper trading, validate the strategy thoroughly, then deploy it with your preferred live-execution tool.
Try the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy on another exchange
Prove it on Binance β don't take our word for it
Build the EMA fast/slow crossover strategy in minutes, backtest it on real Binance data with fees on, and read the robustness score for yourself.
Backtest results are historical and not a promise of future performance. Nothing here is financial advice.