Key takeaways
- Gas measures the computational work a transaction needs; your fee is gas used times price per unit.
- The price splits into an automatic base fee (rises when blocks are full) and an optional priority fee or tip.
- Fees swing sharply because block space is limited and demand is not - timing matters.
- Layer-2 networks and off-peak timing are the honest ways to pay less; never trade security for a cheaper fee.
The quick version: Gas is the fee you pay to have the Ethereum network process your transaction. It rises when the network is busy and falls when it is quiet, because you are effectively bidding for limited space in each block. Understanding how that bid works helps you avoid overpaying.
What “gas” actually is
Every action on Ethereum – sending ETH, swapping tokens, minting an NFT – takes computational work. Gas is the unit that measures that work. A simple transfer uses little gas; a complex smart-contract interaction uses much more. Your total fee is the amount of gas your action needs, multiplied by the price you pay per unit of gas. If the idea of a transaction fee is new, start with how crypto transactions and fees work.
Base fee and priority fee
Ethereum splits the gas price into two parts. The base fee is set automatically by the network and adjusts block by block depending on how full recent blocks were – busy network, higher base fee. The priority fee (sometimes called a tip) is an optional extra you add to encourage validators to include your transaction sooner. When you see a wallet estimate a fee, it is combining these two into a single number. The base fee is also partly removed from circulation, which changes ETH’s supply dynamics – a detail we touch on in Understanding Ethereum’s Upgrade Roadmap.
Why fees swing so much
Because block space is limited and demand is not, fees behave like the price of anything scarce during a rush. A popular token launch, a market-wide frenzy, or a wave of activity can push the base fee up sharply within minutes. When things calm down, it falls back. This is why the same transaction can cost very different amounts depending on when you send it.
It also explains a common frustration: a transaction that appears “stuck.” Usually it is not lost – it simply offered too low a fee for current conditions and is waiting in the queue (the mempool) for the network to quieten down or for you to resubmit with a higher fee. Understanding that your fee is a bid, not a fixed charge, takes the mystery out of it.
How to pay less without cutting corners
A few honest habits help. First, transact during quieter periods when you can – fees are often lower outside peak hours. Second, consider layer-2 networks, which batch transactions together and typically cost a fraction of the base layer for everyday activity. Third, do not blindly raise your fee out of panic; wallets estimate a reasonable price, and overpaying rarely helps unless the network is genuinely congested. What you should not do is chase a suspiciously cheap tool or approve a transaction you do not understand – fee-saving is never worth a security risk, as our guide to avoiding crypto scams explains.
This article is educational and is not financial advice. Fees, tools and network conditions change constantly – always confirm details in your own wallet before transacting.
A word on fee-related scams
Because fees confuse newcomers, they are a favourite hook for scammers. Watch out for fake “wallet unlock” or “gas top-up” pages that ask you to send crypto or connect your wallet to fix a supposed fee problem. Real network fees are paid automatically from your own balance when you transact – you never send a separate payment to a third party to “release” funds, and no legitimate support agent needs your seed phrase to help with fees. When in doubt, close the page and verify through official channels.
The takeaway
Gas is simply the price of limited block space, split into an automatic base fee and an optional tip. It rises and falls with demand, and the main ways to spend less are timing, layer-2 networks, and not panicking. For live context on the network, see the Ethereum page, and continue your learning in The Foundation.
Frequently asked questions
Why was my Ethereum fee so high?
Most likely the network was busy when you transacted, pushing the base fee up, and possibly your action was a complex one that uses a lot of gas. The same transaction at a quieter time usually costs less.
What is the difference between the base fee and the priority fee?
The base fee is set automatically by the network and adjusts with congestion. The priority fee is an optional tip you add to encourage validators to include your transaction sooner.
How can I reduce gas fees?
Transact during quieter periods, use layer-2 networks for everyday activity, and rely on your wallet's fee estimate rather than overpaying out of panic. Never use an untrusted tool just to save on fees.
Last updated Jul 14, 2026
