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Image What is BNB and why it matters

What is BNB and why it matters

Timer7 min read

  • Bitcoin
  • Ethereum

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BNB has experienced an exceptional year in 2025, reaching a new all-time high of nearly 1,370 dollars on October 13. The token created by Binance now sits firmly in the top five cryptocurrencies, just behind Bitcoin, Ethereum, USDT and XRP. 

This rise is remarkable for an asset launched a little more than eight years ago, when it was possible to acquire one BNB for only 15 cents during its 2017 ICO.

From the beginning, BNB has served multiple purposes. It was first introduced as a utility token for the Binance Exchange, allowing users to pay trading fees at a discounted rate. 

Over time, its role expanded as it became the native token of the BNB Chain ecosystem, powering transactions, gas fees, and on-chain operations. BNB also provides access to features such as Launchpad and Launchpool, reinforcing its position as a core asset within Binance’s broader infrastructure.

How it started: Binance, the architecture, the ecosystem

BNB was born during the first major phase of global crypto adoption, at the beginning of the 2017 bull run that pushed Bitcoin above 10,000 dollars for the first time. The ICO was launched on Ethereum in July 2017, a few months before the opening of the Binance exchange by Changpeng Zhao and Yi He.  

Binance’s rapid rise - becoming the world’s largest crypto exchange in only 180 days - gave BNB immediate exposure and utility. At that time, the platform listed only five tokens: BTC, ETH, LTC, NEO and BNB.

Binance helped bootstrap the ecosystem by adapting major Ethereum DeFi primitives, with PancakeSwap emerging as a BNB Chain-native alternative to Uniswap. These early protocols rapidly attracted millions of users thanks to significantly lower fees and faster execution compared to Ethereum during the congested 2020–2021 cycle.

After the mainnet launch on April 18, 2019, BNB migrated in 2020 from the Ethereum network to what is now BNB Chain. According to DefiLlama, BNB Chain has become the second-largest Layer-1 ecosystem after Ethereum in decentralized exchange volume and the third for daily active users.

On February 15, 2022, Binance Chain and BSC were officially unified under the BNB Chain brand. The name “BNB” reflects the ecosystem’s guiding principle (“Build and Build”), highlighting its focus on continuous innovation and community-driven development.

BNB Chain operates on a dual-chain architecture: the BNB Beacon Chain manages governance and consensus, while BNB Smart Chain handles smart contracts and decentralized applications.

The broader ecosystem also includes opBNB (a Layer-2 rollup solution), zkBNB (a zero-knowledge rollup), and BNB Greenfield, a decentralized data storage network designed to support Web3-native data management.

BNB Timeline

The tokenomics of BNB

At launch, 200 million BNB were minted, with 100 million sold during the ICO. The remaining supply was distributed among the Binance team, ecosystem development, and early contributors.

BNB stands out for its deflationary economic model, initially built on a quarterly buyback-and-burn program funded by a portion of Binance’s revenues. This approach progressively reduced the circulating supply by repurchasing BNB on the market and permanently destroying the tokens.

In 2021, the system transitioned to BNB Auto-Burn, a transparent and fully automated mechanism driven by an on-chain formula. It determines the number of tokens burned each quarter using two variables: the average market price of BNB and the total number of blocks produced on the BNB Smart Chain, which serves as a proxy for network activity. On average, about two million BNB are removed from circulation each quarter, although the exact amount varies with market conditions.

In parallel, the Real-Time Burn (BEP-95) permanently destroys a portion of gas fees from every transaction. As network activity increases, more BNB is burned, reinforcing a direct link between usage and token scarcity.

The long-term target is to reduce the total supply to 100 million BNB. As of November 26, 2025, more than 64 million BNB tokens had been burned.

BNB TokenomicsBNB Token Burn

The environment of BNB chain

The BNB Chain ecosystem has evolved into one of the most active and diverse environments in the crypto industry, spanning decentralized finance, gaming, social applications, infrastructure services, and real-world asset platforms.

A major pillar of this ecosystem is its stablecoin layer. While BUSD once played a central role, regulatory pressure in 2023 halted new issuance, triggering a sharp decline in its supply. Liquidity has since migrated toward USDT and USDC.

BNB Chain has also been home to one of the year’s most successful projects: Aster. This decentralized exchange (DEX), backed by YZi Labs, an entity linked to Binance co-founder Changpeng Zhao, has seen rapid growth, driving a significant increase in on-chain activity and pushing volumes to levels not seen since the 2021 cycle.

At the same time, new verticals are strengthening the BNB Chain ecosystem. The opBNB Layer-2 network significantly reduces transaction costs and supports high-throughput use cases such as gaming and social applications, while BNB Greenfield provides decentralized storage tailored for data-intensive Web3 platforms.

Macro-institutional trends are also fueling this momentum. Speculation around a potential U.S. spot BNB ETF has intensified, while we witnessed the creation of the first BNB crypto treasuries, like Seascape and Jiuzi Holdings. Kazakhstan’s national crypto vehicle, the Alem Crypto Fund, has likewise made BNB its first official acquisition.

More recently, BlackRock announced it is extending its $2.5 billion tokenized Treasury fund BUIDL to BNB Chain, while Binance now accepts BUIDL as off-exchange collateral. This integration gives institutional traders new capital-efficiency tools within the Binance ecosystem.

Perspectives and risks

BNB’s main weakness is the degree of centralization within its validator set, which includes around 26 validators, a small number compared to more decentralized networks like Ethereum. 

Another significant risk is the perception that BNB remains closely tied to Binance. If the exchange were to face operational or regulatory challenges (as illustrated by recent allegations of facilitating illicit transactions), the token could be directly affected. 

Binance has consistently stated that BNB Chain operates independently, despite the exchange’s early involvement and continued investment in the ecosystem. Over time, the company has deliberately phased out its branding from the network to underline its decentralization efforts and regulatory separation.

The stated long-term objective is to foster an autonomous, community-driven ecosystem not governed by any single entity.

Written by
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CoinShares
Published on07 Jan 2026

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