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I am wondering if there's a website that provides the price of the standard gas limit (21000 Gas, transaction cost for sending ETH) in ETH unit.

I checked Ether.Fund site, but it provides the gas price in BTC and is based on ether pre-sale rate.

2 Answers 2

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There is no fixed gas price that transactions must have.

You can specify the gas price, and if you set a gas price within certain bounds, the transaction will be accepted by miners using their default values and oracle.

The default gas price is now 0.02 microether which is equivalent to:

  • 0.00000002 Ether (.02 * 1e-6)
  • 0.02e12 wei
  • 20000000000 wei
  • 20e9 wei
  • 20 Gwei (gigawei)
  • 0.02 szabo

When you send ETH, your client (Geth or Parity) will use the default gas price of 0.02 microether.

If 1 ETH is $10, 1 gas will cost 0.00000002 * 10 dollars.

If ETH is $10, 21000 gas will cost 0.00000002 * 10 * 21000 = 0.0042 dollars, which is 0.42 cents.

If ETH is $1000, 21000 gas will cost 0.00000002 * 1000 * 21000 = 0.42 dollars, which is 42 cents.

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  • 1
    Um, wouldn't it be .0042 cents, not .42 cents?
    – Brain2000
    Jul 21, 2016 at 2:51
  • @Brain2000 0.5 dollars would be 50 cents, so is there a mistake elsewhere?
    – eth
    Jul 21, 2016 at 5:22
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    Same calculation with current ether price (250$) is 0,105$ and probably get larger. Is there any miners having less than default gas price (0.02 microether)? And what would the probability for miners having very low gas price to deploy a transaction? @eth
    – alper
    Jun 7, 2017 at 23:16
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    @Avatar ethgasstation.info suggests that a gas price of 2 Gwei (0.002 microether) will be confirmed in less than 5 minutes on average.
    – eth
    Jun 11, 2017 at 8:17
  • 2
    Just corrected the dollars to cents conversion, I believe? @CaptainBli confirm?
    – pfrank
    Aug 24, 2017 at 17:52
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There is no fixed gas price that transactions must have.

However, you can use the fast gas feed from the Chainlink decentralized oracle service to tell you what gas price you need to set for your transaction to go through "fast". The fast gas feed gets independent updates from different oracles and posts an aggregate of it on-chain, so anyone can know what the current price of "speed" on the network is.

A transaction going through in under 2 minutes at the moment is considered to be fast.

There are also independent sites like ETH Gas Station that have done analytics to identify the speed of the network as well.

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