Spot Trading Guide

Gate.io Register - Signup, App Download & KYC Guide spot trading guides covering buy and sell flows, order types, fund transfers and practical execution basics.

Editorial Focus

How this topic cluster is structured

Trading pages rank better when they explain decisions, not just buttons. This category focuses on buying USDT, order choice, first spot execution and fee awareness so users can move from registration into actual trading with fewer avoidable mistakes.

The practical reading order is usually funding first, then order-type comparison, then first-trade execution. That structure also improves internal linking because each page leads naturally into the next action.

Start signup and finish day-one setup Carry users from account opening to download, KYC and the first action.

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Hub entry

Signup, KYC and day-one checklist hub

If this page is only one step in the onboarding path, return to the signup hub and review registration, verification, app setup and first-buy checks in order.

All Articles

All articles in this category

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FAQ

Common questions in this category

Which trading page should beginners read first?

Most beginners should start with the USDT funding page, then compare market vs limit orders before placing a first spot trade.

Why do trading topics need separate pages?

Buying, order choice, first execution and fee settings solve different user questions. Splitting them improves clarity and search matching.

What should users check before the first live trade?

They should check funding source, wallet balance, order type, fee impact and whether they understand the trade size before submitting.

Decision Points

What this category helps you decide

  • Decide how the account will be funded before choosing an execution route.
  • Compare market, limit and convert paths based on cost control, not only speed.
  • Keep the first live trade small enough that execution review is easy.

Common Mistakes

What these pages help you avoid

  • Buying USDT without checking the actual spread or wallet destination.
  • Using an order type that is not fully understood.
  • Skipping the post-trade review of fees, fills and resulting balances.