
Learn how leverage, maintenance margin, and cross vs isolated margin work in perpetual futures trading.

Perpetual futures, aka perps, have grown into one of the world’s most actively traded crypto derivatives instruments—during April 2026, Hyperliquid alone processed $187.01 billion in perps volume. Understanding perps leverage is essential for opening positions, managing margin, monitoring funding costs, and recognizing liquidation risk before it materializes.
This guide covers how leverage in perpetual futures trading works: what maintenance margin means, how cross and isolated margin modes shape risk differently, and why funding rates matter for leveraged positions. For a foundational overview of what perps are, how they work, and how they differ from traditional futures and spot trading, see the beginner's guide to perpetual futures.
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only. It is not financial advice, not a solicitation, and not for UK audiences. Perpetual futures are risky and not suitable for all users.
Leverage allows traders to open positions worth more than their deposited collateral, amplifying both gains and losses proportionally. With 10x leverage on $1,000 of margin, the resulting exposure is $10,000. A 1% price move changes the position's value by $100—a 10% swing relative to the collateral backing it.
Available leverage varies by platform and asset. For example, MetaMask Perps via Hyperliquid supports up to 50x leverage on 150+ assets, though the exact limit depends on the specific market and liquidity conditions. Hyperliquid uses a tiered margin system that automatically reduces effective leverage as position size grows. For example, positions exceeding $10 million notional on BTC typically operate at 3x–10x regardless of the headline maximum.
Higher leverage amplifies returns in both directions: the same price movement that doubles equity at high leverage could also wipe it out entirely. Leverage in perps is commonly used for short-term directional trading and portfolio hedging, though each use case carries distinct risk profiles.
Two margin thresholds govern every leveraged perpetual futures position: initial margin and maintenance margin.
Initial margin is the collateral required to open a trade. The formula is straightforward: position size x mark price ÷ leverage. At 10x leverage, opening a $10,000 position requires $1,000 in initial margin.
Maintenance margin is the lower ongoing minimum required to keep the position open. On Hyperliquid, maintenance margin is set at half the initial margin rate at maximum leverage. For example, at 20x maximum leverage (5% initial margin rate), the maintenance margin rate is 2.5%. Falling below this threshold triggers liquidation.
Here's how the process typically unfolds as equity declines:
Risk alerts. As unrealized losses grow, platforms may issue warnings that account equity is approaching the maintenance margin threshold.
Margin call zone. If equity continues to decline toward the maintenance level, the platform may prompt the trader to add collateral or reduce exposure.
Liquidation. If equity drops below maintenance margin, the platform partially or fully liquidates the position to prevent further losses. On MetaMask Perps via Hyperliquid, the position is automatically closed at liquidation, so a trader cannot lose more than the margin assigned to that position.
Consider a long BTC position opened at $60,000 with $1,000 margin at 10x leverage. The position's notional value is $10,000. If the maintenance margin rate is 2.5%, the position is liquidated when equity falls to $250 (2.5% of $10,000). That means a price decline of roughly 7.5%—to approximately $55,500—triggers liquidation.
At 50x leverage on the same $1,000, the notional value is $50,000, and a price decline of roughly 1.5% triggers liquidation. Higher leverage compresses the distance between entry and liquidation proportionally.
Perpetual futures platforms generally offer two margin modes, each with a different risk profile.
Cross margin pools the total available account balance as shared collateral for all open positions. Unrealized gains from one position can offset losses in another, which may reduce the chance of liquidation on any single trade—but it also means a large loss on one position can drain collateral from the entire account.
Isolated margin confines collateral to a specific position. Losses are contained to the margin assigned to that trade, and a liquidation on one position does not affect others.
Feature | Cross margin | Isolated margin |
Collateral scope | Shared across all positions | Dedicated per position |
Risk exposure | Account-wide | Position-specific |
Liquidation impact | Can affect entire account balance | Limited to assigned margin |
Common use case | Multi-position strategies where offsets reduce individual liquidation risk | Trades where capping maximum loss per position is the priority |
Important for MetaMask Perps users: All orders on MetaMask Perps via Hyperliquid use isolated margin only. This means for any given position, only the assigned margin is at risk—there is no risk of loss to available balance or other positions. Traders who want access to cross margin can use Hyperliquid's native interface directly.
For a deeper comparison of how each mode affects liquidation thresholds, position sizing, and risk management, see cross vs isolated margin in perpetual futures trading.
Funding rates are periodic payments exchanged between long and short holders to keep perpetual futures prices anchored to the spot market. Because perps don't expire, funding serves as the mechanism that prevents the contract price from drifting permanently away from the underlying asset.
The mechanics: when a perps contract trades above the spot price, the funding rate is positive, and long holders pay short holders. When it trades below spot, the rate turns negative, and shorts pay longs.
On Hyperliquid, funding is calculated using an 8-hour rate formula but paid every hour at one-eighth of the computed rate. The formula incorporates an interest rate component (fixed at 0.01% per 8 hours, or approximately 11.6% APR) and a premium component that fluctuates based on the deviation between the perps price and the spot oracle price. Funding on Hyperliquid is capped at 4% per hour—a less aggressive cap than most centralized exchanges.
Why this matters for leveraged positions:
Cost accumulation. Funding payments are calculated on the full notional position size, not just the margin. A $50,000 position at 50x leverage (from $1,000 margin) pays the same funding as a $50,000 position at 1x. At high leverage, funding costs can represent a large percentage of the deposited collateral over time.
Directional drag. During prolonged periods of positive funding, long positions incur a steady cost that erodes profitability, even if the price moves favorably. The reverse applies to shorts during negative funding periods.
Volatility interaction. Elevated funding rates during volatile markets can coincide with liquidation cascades, where forced closures of leveraged positions accelerate the price move that triggered them.
Key factors to monitor include current and projected funding rates before opening a position, payment intervals, and how changes in the rate and price basis may affect carrying costs over time. For a closer look at how funding intervals, carry strategies, and rate calculations work across platforms, see perpetual futures funding frequency and strategies.
Leverage raises the stakes on every variable in a trade. A ~1% adverse price move can eliminate equity entirely at 100x leverage, and even moderate leverage leaves limited room for error during volatile sessions.
Factors commonly considered in managing leveraged perps positions include:
Position sizing and collateral buffers. Larger buffers between entry and liquidation price provide more room to absorb adverse moves. The relationship between leverage, position size, and liquidation distance is mechanical and predictable; the less margin relative to notional, the closer the liquidation threshold.
Margin mode selection. Isolated margin caps losses per trade at the assigned collateral. Cross margin (where available) offers more flexibility across multiple positions but exposes the full account balance to risk.
Funding cost awareness. Monitoring funding rates and understanding their impact on net profit and loss over time is especially relevant for positions held across multiple funding intervals.
Platform mechanics. Each platform has its own liquidation engine, auto-deleveraging (ADL) policies, and risk parameters. Reviewing platform-specific documentation—including Hyperliquid's contract specifications and margin tier tables—helps clarify how liquidation, margin calls, and position limits work in practice.
Perpetual futures carry the risk of total loss of deposited collateral. Large liquidity shocks, especially during periods of elevated funding, have historically coincided with rapid liquidation cascades across the market. For more info about perps trading mechanics, see a guide to liquidation and how it works.
Explore 150+ available perps assets with up to 50x leverage via MetaMask Perps powered by Hyperliquid, with limit orders, take profit, and stop loss levels suitable for different risk strategies.