Today, I participated in the Binance 'Spot Trading Feast' grid part and found a problem: the spot grid seems not to enjoy the $BNB handling fee 25% discount, and was still deducted at the original price of 0.1%, see image 1.
After some research, I discovered the mystery behind it:
For spot grid and other bot trading, the handling fee is first fully deducted from the trading bot account, and then the system will refund it to the spot account. This means that the 25% discount is still available 🤣🤣. You can check the handling fee refund record after a few hours by clicking here .
You can also check in the bot orders, but the entrance is quite deep, and most people really can't find it:

The event will end tomorrow afternoon at 19:00 (2025/12/19), so those who haven’t participated should hurry up. The grid part of this event is 'the more you work, the more you earn, the less you work, the less you earn, divided by trading volume proportionally', which is quite good.
Many people say that the grid doesn’t execute trades and can't reach a trading volume of 200. In fact, there are skills to it.
You can manually create a grid: set the grid to only have two cells, ensure that the lowest and highest prices can encapsulate the current market price, check the option ☑️ 'Sell all at termination', and then start this grid with around 220u. At this point, the grid will immediately buy around 100u of spot at market price, and then you will immediately close this grid, achieving a trading volume of 200u.
You can also wait for the price to rise slightly before closing the grid, but I do not recommend it, as it may get trapped once it falls.
It is recommended to use $BNB to participate in this event, because BNB is a mainstream coin, and there is no fear of being trapped. Even if you are unfortunately trapped, BNB can still serve as handling fees.
In addition, combining the rebate can further save on handling fees. For details, see Important | A thorough explanation of Binance handling fee refunds: How to save 40% on Binance trading fees? .
