Deflationary Coins
12,550 coins #9 Page 15| | Coins | | | ||
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| The coins below are ranked lower due to missing data. Learn more | |||||
| | 701 | | $ | -0.77% | |
| | 702 | | $ | -2.40% | |
| | 703 | | $ | -1.18% | |
| | 704 | | $ | +0.18% | |
| | 705 | | $ | -1.11% | |
| | 706 | | $ | -0.00% | |
| | 707 | | $ | +0.24% | |
| | 708 | | $ | -1.78% | |
| | 709 | | $ | +76.08% | |
| | 710 | | $ | +0.48% | |
| | 711 | | $ | +0.02% | |
| | 712 | | $ | -0.58% | |
| | 713 | | $ | -0.80% | |
| | 714 | | $ | -0.12% | |
| | 715 | | $ | +1,071.09% | |
| | 716 | | $ | -0.70% | |
| | 717 | | $ | -0.66% | |
| | 718 | | $ | +0.39% | |
| | 719 | | $ | -0.88% | |
| | 720 | | $ | +3.08% | |
| | 721 | | $ | +0.07% | |
| | 722 | | $ | +5,400.29% | |
| | 723 | | $ | -4.32% | |
| | 724 | | $ | +0.37% | |
| | 725 | | $ | -3.28% | |
| | 726 | | $ | -0.96% | |
| | 727 | | $ | -0.01% | |
| | 728 | | $ | -0.18% | |
| | 729 | | $ | -0.98% | |
| | 730 | | $ | -4.20% | |
| | 731 | | $ | -0.20% | |
| | 732 | | $ | -10.16% | |
| | 733 | | $ | +0.16% | |
| | 734 | | $ | +34.22% | |
| | 735 | | $ | -22.93% | |
| | 736 | | $ | +16.20% | |
| | 737 | | $ | +1.15% | |
| | 738 | | $ | -6.53% | |
| | 739 | | $ | -1.09% | |
| | 740 | | $ | +0.02% | |
| | 741 | | $ | -0.25% | |
| | 742 | | $ | -0.62% | |
| | 743 | | $ | -4.82% | |
| | 744 | | $ | +3.20% | |
| | 745 | | $ | -2.05% | |
| | 746 | | $ | +12.46% | |
| | 747 | | $ | +8.62% | |
| | 748 | | $ | -0.34% | |
| | 749 | | $ | -0.08% | |
| | 750 | | $ | -1.44% | |
Trending Deflationary Coins
| Coins | Price | 24h | |
|---|---|---|---|
| | | $ | -2.56% |
| | | $ | -1.09% |
| | | $ | -0.59% |
| | | $ | -1.30% |
| | | $ | -5.97% |
Top gainers
| Coins | | | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| | | $ | +43.50% | ||
| | | $ | +42.20% | ||
| | | $ | +27.83% | ||
| | | $ | +23.52% | ||
| | | $ | +19.01% | ||
| All gainers | |||||
What Are Deflationary Tokens?
Deflationary tokens are cryptocurrencies engineered to shrink circulating supply over time. Through burns, buy-backs, or ever-slower issuance, they aim to create scarcity that—if demand holds or grows—may push unit prices higher. The mechanism is transparent and on-chain, but never a guarantee of value; utility and market interest still rule.
Quick Facts
- Core idea: Net-reduction in tokens (or in issuance rate) → potential supply/demand asymmetry.
- Burn mechanics:
- Protocol burns – % of every tx auto-destroyed (e.g., 1% of each transfer).
- Buy-back & burn – team/DAO uses revenue to market-buy tokens and send to 0x…dEaD.
- Scheduled burns – quarterly events, milestone burns, or halving-like block-reward drops.
- Utility sinks – tokens spent in-game, for NFT mints, or naming services are permanently removed.
- Transparency: Burns are viewable on-chain; verify contract code and burn address supply.
- ≠ price up only: A 50% supply drop with 90% demand loss still nets lower market cap.
Deflationary Patterns You’ll Meet
- Capped-supply + falling issuance – Bitcoin-style halvings (dis-inflationary until 21M).
- Tx-tax burn tokens – Safemoon, EverReflect, etc.; tax 1–2% on every transfer, split between burn and holders.
- Revenue burners – Binance uses ~20% of quarterly profit to buy & burn BNB until 100M left.
- Sink economies – AXS breeding fees, STEP’N shoe-minting, ENS registration costs—tokens vanish as users consume services.
Live Examples (verify latest burns yourself)
- BNB – Auto-burn formula + quarterly profit burns; target 100M left.
- Ethereum (post-1559) – Base fee burned every block; net supply can deflate when usage is high.
- Shiba Inu – Team burns portions of treasury and NFT mint proceeds; community runs “burn playlists.”
- Fantom (FTM) – Governance voted to burn 10% of block rewards; plus on-chain fees burned.
- KCS (KuCoin Token) – Daily buy-back & burn from exchange revenue.
Benefits
- Scarcity narrative – easy for retail to grasp “number go down, price go up.”
- Holder alignment – fee-funded burns tie network activity to token value capture.
- Auditable – burn addresses and tx taxes are visible on-chain; no black-box repurchases.
- Marketing spice – deflationary pitch attracts early liquidity and social media buzz.
Risks & Side Effects
- Liquidity shrink – excessive burns can thin order-books and increase volatility.
- Hoarding incentive – users delay spending if they expect tomorrow’s token to be scarcer (bad for utility coins).
- Perverse taxes – high transfer taxes discourage arbitrage and CEX listings.
- Fundamental mask – teams may hype burns to hide lack of product-market fit.
- Centralised burns – admin-key burns or undisclosed buy-backs can be paused or reversed.
Due-Diligence Checklist
- Read tokenomics paper – is burn % fixed or governance mutable?
- Inspect burn address on explorer – confirm supply is really destroyed.
- Check burn size vs float – 0.01% monthly is cosmetic; 2%+ can matter.
- Revenue source – protocol revenue burns are stronger than inflationary mint→burn loops.
- Audit & code – ensure burn logic can’t be disabled or upgraded maliciously.
- Demand side – burns help only if users, fees, or real sinks exist.
Final Thoughts
Deflationary design is a scalpel, not a magic wand. When tied to genuine usage (fees, sinks, revenue) it can tighten supply and reward long-term holders. When used as a marketing gimmick—tiny burns, endless mint, or opaque buy-backs—it adds noise without value. Treat every “burn” headline with scepticism: verify on-chain evidence, weigh demand drivers, and never let smoke substitute for substance.