When choosing a SOL recovery tool, the fee percentage is probably the single most important factor. Every tool does fundamentally the same thing – close your empty token accounts and return the rent deposits – so what you are really choosing is how much of your recovered SOL you get to keep.
This guide provides a current comparison of fees across every major tool, with math showing exactly how the differences add up.
The Fee Landscape
Here is every major SOL recovery tool and what they charge, as of early 2026:
| Tool | Fee Percentage | Fee Model | Active? |
|---|---|---|---|
| SolRecover.io | 4% | Flat percentage | Yes |
| Solana Floor | 8% | Flat percentage | Yes |
| Close Empty Accounts | 10% | Flat percentage | Yes |
| RefundYourSOL | 15% | Flat percentage | Yes |
| SolRefunds | 20% | Flat percentage | Yes |
| Various others | 15-25% | Varies | Varies |
A few observations:
- Fees range from 4% to 25% across the market
- The gap between cheapest and most expensive is significant
- Most tools use a simple flat percentage model
What the Fees Mean in Real Numbers
Percentages can feel abstract, so let us translate them into actual SOL. Here is what you would pay in fees on various recovery amounts:
Small Recovery: 0.1 SOL (about 50 accounts)
| Tool | Fee % | Fee Paid | You Keep |
|---|---|---|---|
| SolRecover | 4% | 0.004 SOL | 0.096 SOL |
| Solana Floor | 8% | 0.008 SOL | 0.092 SOL |
| Close Empty Accounts | 10% | 0.010 SOL | 0.090 SOL |
| RefundYourSOL | 15% | 0.015 SOL | 0.085 SOL |
| SolRefunds | 20% | 0.020 SOL | 0.080 SOL |
| High-fee tool | 25% | 0.025 SOL | 0.075 SOL |
Difference between lowest and highest fee: 0.021 SOL ($3.15 at $150/SOL)
Medium Recovery: 0.5 SOL (about 245 accounts)
| Tool | Fee % | Fee Paid | You Keep |
|---|---|---|---|
| SolRecover | 4% | 0.020 SOL | 0.480 SOL |
| Solana Floor | 8% | 0.040 SOL | 0.460 SOL |
| Close Empty Accounts | 10% | 0.050 SOL | 0.450 SOL |
| RefundYourSOL | 15% | 0.075 SOL | 0.425 SOL |
| SolRefunds | 20% | 0.100 SOL | 0.400 SOL |
| High-fee tool | 25% | 0.125 SOL | 0.375 SOL |
Difference between lowest and highest fee: 0.105 SOL ($15.75)
Large Recovery: 1.0 SOL (about 490 accounts)
| Tool | Fee % | Fee Paid | You Keep |
|---|---|---|---|
| SolRecover | 4% | 0.040 SOL | 0.960 SOL |
| Solana Floor | 8% | 0.080 SOL | 0.920 SOL |
| Close Empty Accounts | 10% | 0.100 SOL | 0.900 SOL |
| RefundYourSOL | 15% | 0.150 SOL | 0.850 SOL |
| SolRefunds | 20% | 0.200 SOL | 0.800 SOL |
| High-fee tool | 25% | 0.250 SOL | 0.750 SOL |
Difference between lowest and highest fee: 0.210 SOL ($31.50)
The Compound Effect
Many Solana users run recovery periodically – every month or two as new empty accounts accumulate. If you are an active trader, you might recover 0.1-0.2 SOL each time. Over a year, that adds up:
Annual Fees: Monthly Recovery of 0.15 SOL
| Tool | Fee % | Annual Fee | Annual Net |
|---|---|---|---|
| SolRecover | 4% | 0.072 SOL | 1.728 SOL |
| Solana Floor | 8% | 0.144 SOL | 1.656 SOL |
| Close Empty Accounts | 10% | 0.180 SOL | 1.620 SOL |
| RefundYourSOL | 15% | 0.270 SOL | 1.530 SOL |
| SolRefunds | 20% | 0.360 SOL | 1.440 SOL |
The annual difference between a 4% and 15% tool on this usage pattern is 0.198 SOL ($29.70).
What About Network Fees?
Every Solana transaction has a small network fee (also called a “priority fee” or “base fee”). This is paid to the network, not to the recovery tool, and it applies regardless of which tool you use.
The network fee is typically:
- Base fee: 0.000005 SOL per signature
- Total per recovery: Usually 0.0001-0.001 SOL depending on the number of accounts
This is negligible compared to the tool’s percentage fee. Even on a modest recovery of 0.1 SOL, the network fee is less than 1% of the recovered amount.
All tools charge the same network fee because it goes to Solana validators, not the tool operators. So the network fee is not a differentiator between tools – only the percentage fee matters for comparison.
Why Are Fees So Different?
Recovery tool fees vary for several reasons:
- Operational model: Tools that process transactions server-side may have higher infrastructure costs than purely client-side tools. Servers, monitoring, and maintenance all cost money.
- Feature scope: Some tools bundle recovery with other features (token burning, analytics, portfolio tools), and the higher fee may subsidize that broader feature set.
- Market positioning: Earlier tools set their fees when there was less competition. Newer entrants may price lower to attract users.
- Business sustainability: Different teams have different cost structures and revenue goals.
The core recovery operation itself is computationally simple – querying the blockchain for empty accounts, building a close transaction, and submitting it. But operational overhead, support, and ongoing development are real costs that differ by team.
Hidden Fees and Gotchas
When evaluating tools, watch out for:
Minimum Fees
Some tools have a minimum fee – for example, “4% or 0.01 SOL, whichever is greater.” On small recoveries, this can make the effective fee much higher than the stated percentage. Check whether your tool of choice has a minimum.
Bundled Services
Some tools combine recovery with other services (token burning, account analysis) and charge a higher overall fee. If you only need recovery, consider whether you are paying for features you do not use.
Dynamic Fees
A few tools have experimented with dynamic fees that change based on network conditions or the amount being recovered. This makes it hard to predict what you will pay. Flat fees are more transparent and predictable.
Donation Models
Some tools ask for voluntary “tips” or “donations” on top of their fee. These are optional, but the UX sometimes makes it feel like they are expected. Know that you are not obligated to tip beyond the stated fee.
The Bottom Line on Fees
The math is straightforward:
- At 4%: you keep 96% of recovered SOL
- At 8%: you keep 92%
- At 10%: you keep 90%
- At 15%: you keep 85%
- At 25%: you keep 75%
Fee percentage is the clearest differentiator between tools, since the core operation is the same. However, fees are not the only factor – track record, security model, feature set, and user experience also matter. A slightly higher fee on a tool you trust and that has been operating longer may be worthwhile for some users.
Making Your Decision
Consider the full picture: fees, security, track record, and features. The fee data in this article gives you one important dimension. For a broader comparison covering security and UX, see our full tool comparison. And if you are wondering whether recovery is worth it at all, check our ROI analysis.