An exchange token is a cryptocurrency issued by a centralized exchange (CEX) that grants holders benefits like trading fee discounts, access to token launches, and sometimes a share of exchange revenue. Exchange tokens align user incentives with platform growth and give exchanges a native economic flywheel.
Core Utility
Exchange tokens typically offer:
| Benefit | Description |
|---|---|
| Fee discounts | Paying trading fees in the native token earns 25–50% reduction |
| Token launches | Priority or exclusive access to IEO/launchpad sales |
| Staking rewards | Lock tokens to earn yield or enhanced benefits |
| Exchange revenue share | Buy-and-burn or dividend mechanisms tie value to fees |
| VIP tiers | Higher holdings unlock better rates, withdrawals, API limits |
| Governance | Vote on exchange decisions (less common at CEXs) |
Major Exchange Tokens
| Token | Exchange | Notable Features |
|---|---|---|
| BNB | Binance | Powers BNB Chain; broadest utility ecosystem |
| OKB | OKX | Revenue share; OKX Chain gas token |
| GT | Gate.io | Gatetoken; fee discounts, voting |
| KCS | KuCoin | Daily bonus from 50% of trading fees |
| CRO | Crypto.com | Visa card tiers; Cronos chain gas token |
| FTT | FTX (defunct) | Collateral for margin; used for Alameda leverage (caused collapse) |
| HT | Huobi (HTX) | Fee discounts; HTX Chain ecosystem |
| LEO | Bitfinex | iFinex revenue buyback; partially backed by recovered funds |
Buy-and-Burn Mechanisms
Many exchanges use a portion of profits to repurchase and destroy their native token — reducing supply and theoretically supporting price:
- Binance burns BNB quarterly using 20% of profits. Total supply started at 200M BNB; target is 100M.
- KuCoin burns KCS using 10% of trading fee revenue.
- OKX runs regular OKB buy-and-burn programs.
The buy-and-burn mechanism ties token value directly to exchange revenue — a bull market with high trading volume benefits both the exchange and token holders.
Exchange Tokens vs. DeFi Governance Tokens
| Feature | Exchange Token (CEX) | DeFi Governance Token |
|---|---|---|
| Issued by | Centralized company | Protocol smart contract |
| Revenue share | Yes (via buy-back/burn) | Sometimes (via fee switch) |
| Governance | Limited | Core model |
| Regulatory risk | High (securities scrutiny) | Variable |
| Utility | Fee discounts, launchpad | Protocol governance, bribing |
Risks
- Regulatory risk — The SEC and global regulators have scrutinized exchange tokens as unregistered securities. Binance’s $4.3B DOJ settlement (2023) included scrutiny of BNB.
- Exchange failure — FTX’s collapse in 2022 wiped FTT to near zero as the token was used as collateral for Alameda’s liabilities, creating a catastrophic death spiral.
- Centralization — Token utility depends entirely on the exchange’s continued operation, compliance, and goodwill.
- Concentration — Exchanges typically hold large token reserves, enabling them to influence price.
History
- 2013 — Ripple (XRP) not strictly an exchange token, but an early example of a company-issued utility token.
- 2017 — Binance launches BNB at ICO price ~$0.10; offers 50% fee discount in year 1.
- 2018 — Exchange token boom — Huobi (HT), KuCoin (KCS), OKEx (OKB) all launch similar models.
- 2019 — Binance Smart Chain launches, giving BNB blockchain utility beyond fee discounts.
- 2022 — FTX collapse — FTT’s value collapse triggers Binance to withdraw support, accelerating FTX’s bankruptcy. A warning on exchange token risks.
- 2023 — Binance settles with DOJ; BNB faces ongoing regulatory scrutiny.
Common Misconceptions
“Exchange tokens are equity in the exchange.”
They are not equity. Holders have no legal ownership claim to exchange assets or profits. Revenue-linked mechanics (buy-back/burn) are a market design, not a legal obligation.
“Exchange tokens are safe because they’re backed by a big exchange.”
FTT showed that exchange tokens can collapse to zero if the exchange fails or if the token is used as collateral in a self-referential loop. Size of the issuing exchange does not guarantee token safety.