Most chains make you feel like fees are low—until demand spikes and your “simple” transaction turns into a surprise charge you can’t explain to your users or your finance sheet.
Vanar Chain goes after the boring (and useful) goal: anchor transaction costs to a fixed USD target, then adjust the required $VANRY amount as the token price moves—so the experience stays stable even when the market isn’t.
Data: Vanar’s docs define a tier system where common actions (transfer, swap, mint, staking, bridging) sit at about $0.0005, while very large transactions scale up (up to $15) to make block-filling behavior expensive.
Data: The chain records the Tier-1 fee in block headers as feePerTx, and the conversion is validated using multiple sources (including CoinMarketCap, CoinGecko, and Binance) to keep the USD peg logic grounded in real markets.
And lately (early February 2026), the discussion around Vanar’s fee model has clearly picked up again—more people are treating “predictable costs” as the missing piece for mainstream apps, not just a nice metric on a dashboard.

