Reviewing your historical trade records is essential for performance analysis and tax reporting. Register a Binance account to start recording every trade, and remember to get the Binance APP for easy access to your trading history.
Viewing Trade History via the APP
Spot trade history: Open the Binance APP and tap "Trade" at the bottom to enter the spot trading page. At the bottom you'll see "Open Orders" and "Order History" tabs. "Open Orders" shows unfilled pending orders, while "Order History" displays all completed and cancelled orders.
Tap "Order History" to see detailed information for each order, including: trading pair, order type (limit/market), buy or sell direction, order price, fill price, order quantity, filled quantity, fees, and order time.
P2P trade history: In the APP, go to the "P2P Trading" page and find the "Orders" or "My Orders" section. This records all your P2P buy and sell orders, including counterparty information, amounts, payment methods, and completion times.
Deposit and withdrawal history: Go to "Wallet" > "Transaction History" to view all deposit and withdrawal records. Each entry includes the token, amount, address, network, transaction hash (TxID), and processing status.
Viewing More Detailed Records via the Web
Log into your account on the Binance website and click the "Orders" menu at the top for a more complete order management interface. The web version supports filtering by trading pair, date range, order type, and other criteria — making searches more convenient.
On the "Trade History" page, you can see detailed data for every actual fill. Sometimes a single order fills in multiple parts (partial fills), and the trade history shows the specific price and quantity for each fill.
Exporting Trade Records
If you need to export trade records for tax filing, bookkeeping, or analysis, Binance provides an export function. On the web, go to "Orders" > "Spot Orders" > "Trade History," select a date range, and click "Export" to download a CSV file containing all trade data.
Note that single exports have a time range limit, typically a maximum of 3 months. For longer periods, you may need to export in multiple batches.
Viewing Asset Change Records
Beyond trade records, you may also want to see overall asset changes. On the APP's "Assets" page, you can see balance changes across different accounts (spot, funding, futures, etc.). Some pages also provide P&L analysis to help you understand your overall investment performance.
On the web under "Wallet" > "Transaction Log," you can view all types of fund movement records, including trades, fees, interest, airdrops, and more — very comprehensive information.
Using Trade Records for Performance Review
Developing the habit of regularly reviewing trade records is very helpful for improving your trading skills. You can analyze your trading patterns — for example, whether you tend to chase rallies and panic sell, whether stop-losses are executed properly, and which strategies have higher win rates.
It's recommended to export trade records weekly or monthly and organize them in spreadsheets for analysis. Calculate your overall win rate, average risk-reward ratio, maximum drawdown, and other metrics — these are standard practices for professional traders.
API Query Method
If you're a technical user or use trading bots, you can query trade records in bulk through Binance's API. The API supports querying spot, futures, P2P, and other trade data, and can be automated for regular extraction and analysis. You'll need to create an API Key on the API management page with appropriate permissions.
Maintaining complete trade records is useful not only for self-review but also serves as important documentation for account disputes or tax filings.