Tokenomics
16/04/2026
Tokenomics — a blend of token and economics — is the economic design of a cryptocurrency. It describes how tokens are created, distributed, used, and removed from circulation. Tokenomics is one of the most important factors in evaluating any crypto asset: strong fundamentals can't compensate for broken economic incentives.
Key components
Supply
- Max supply — hard cap on tokens ever in existence (Bitcoin: 21 million; many tokens: uncapped)
- Total supply — tokens currently issued, including locked/vested portions
- Circulating supply — tokens freely tradeable on the market
Emission
The schedule by which new tokens enter circulation:
- Fixed issuance — constant block reward (classic Proof-of-Work model, simplified)
- Halvings — periodic cuts, e.g. Bitcoin halves the block reward every ~4 years
- Exponential decay — smooth decrease over time (e.g. Tari)
- Tail emission — small perpetual issuance to keep paying miners/validators (Monero, Tari)
- Fixed supply at genesis — all tokens pre-minted; no ongoing emission
Distribution
How initial tokens are allocated among stakeholders:
- Team — founders and developers (typically 10–25%, usually vested 3–4 years with a 1-year cliff)
- Investors — seed, private, public sales (with lockups and vesting)
- Community — airdrops, liquidity mining, public sale
- Treasury / Foundation — reserved for future development and ecosystem grants
- Mining/staking rewards — released over time to network participants
Vesting and unlocks
Time-locked tokens release over months or years. Large unlocks can cause price drops — investors watch unlock calendars carefully.
Utility and burn
- Utility — is the token actually needed for the protocol to function? (gas fees, governance, collateral, access?)
- Burns — deliberate destruction of tokens to reduce supply (EIP-1559 burns ETH base fees; BNB has quarterly burns)
Why it matters
A project with strong technology but poor tokenomics — concentrated ownership, aggressive vesting cliffs, unlimited inflation — tends to underperform. Evaluating tokenomics before investing or committing hashrate is as important as evaluating the technology itself.
