U.S. Cryptocurrency Tax Policy 2025: A WEEX User Guide

By: WEEX|2025-07-07 00:00:00
0
Share
copy

Cryptocurrency trading is booming, and with over 5 million users on WEEX, many are diving into the exciting world of digital assets like Bitcoin (BTC) , Ethereum (ETH) , and the WEEX Token WXT ). Whether you're trading, staking, or earning airdrops on WEEX, understanding how the IRS taxes cryptocurrency in the United States is crucial. This guide provides a comprehensive, accurate, and up-to-date overview of U.S. crypto taxes for the 2024 tax year (filed in 2025) and beyond, designed to help WEEX users understand their obligations and remain compliant.

Important Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute tax advice. For your specific cryptocurrency tax situation, always consult a qualified tax professional for personalized guidance.

Crypto Taxes in the USA: The Basics

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) explicitly treats virtual currency as "property" for federal income tax purposes, a stance established in 2014. This means cryptocurrency is subject to the same tax principles that apply to other forms of property, such as stocks or real estate. The IRS broadly defines virtual currency as a digital representation of value (excluding the U.S. dollar or foreign real currency) that functions as a unit of account, a store of value, and a medium of exchange. This definition encompasses cryptocurrencies, stablecoins, and non-fungible tokens (NFTs).

This fundamental classification means that almost any transaction involving cryptocurrency, beyond mere purchase and holding, can trigger a "taxable event." Taxpayers have a legal obligation to report all such transactions on their federal income tax returns, regardless of whether they result in a gain or a loss. On your 2024 federal income tax return (filed in 2025), you'll need to answer a mandatory "digital asset question" on Forms 1040, 1040-SR, or others, asking if you received, sold, exchanged, or disposed of digital assets. Everyone must answer this question, even if you only held crypto without transacting.

Key Taxable Events

For U.S. taxpayers, understanding which activities constitute taxable events is crucial, as the IRS requires reporting of all such events, regardless of the amount involved.

Here's when you might owe taxes on your crypto activities on WEEX:

Selling Crypto for Fiat: When you sell cryptocurrency for U.S. dollars or any other fiat currency (e.g., selling Bitcoin for USD on WEEX’s spot market), this is a clear taxable event. A capital gain (profit) or capital loss (loss) is realized, calculated by subtracting your cost basis from the sale price.

Trading Crypto for Crypto: Exchanging one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., swapping WXT for USDT or ETH on WEEX) is also a taxable event. The IRS views this as if you sold the first cryptocurrency for its U.S. dollar fair market value (FMV), realized a gain or loss, and then immediately used those proceeds to purchase the second cryptocurrency.

Using Crypto for Purchases: Using cryptocurrency to buy goods or services (e.g., paying for a service with BTC via a WEEX partner) is considered a disposition of property, thus triggering a taxable event. The capital gain or loss is determined by the difference between the FMV of the goods or services received and your original cost basis in the cryptocurrency used.

Earning Crypto Income: Cryptocurrency received as income, rather than through purchase, is generally taxed as ordinary income based on its U.S. dollar fair market value (FMV) at the time of receipt. If you subsequently sell this cryptocurrency, any further profit will incur capital gains tax. Common examples of cryptocurrency income include:

  • Airdrops and Hard Forks: Receiving new tokens, such as WXT from WEEX WE-Launch airdrops or forked coins, is taxed as ordinary income when you gain control over them. The FMV at the time of receipt establishes the cost basis for future sales of these tokens.
  • Staking Rewards: Earnings from staking WXT or other proof-of-stake assets on platforms like WEEX (e.g., up to 88.71% APR) are considered ordinary income when the rewards are received.
  • Mining Rewards: Cryptocurrency earned through mining activities is also taxed as ordinary income.
  • Referral Bonuses: Any cryptocurrency received as a referral bonus is subject to ordinary income tax.
  • Payment for Goods or Services: If you receive cryptocurrency as payment for providing services (e.g., as an independent contractor) or for selling goods in a trade or business, the FMV of the cryptocurrency at the time of receipt is considered ordinary income. For businesses, this income will be included in gross business income. Payments to independent contractors totaling $600 or more in a year may need to be reported on Form 1099-NEC.
  • Interest from Crypto Lending: Interest earned from lending out cryptocurrency also constitutes an income event.

Non-Taxable Events

While the following actions do not immediately trigger tax obligations, it is still advisable to maintain detailed records of all such activities.

Buying Crypto with Fiat: Simply using U.S. dollars or other fiat currency to purchase cryptocurrency (e.g., purchasing WXT with USD via WEEX’s OTC service) is not a taxable event. Tax implications only arise when you subsequently dispose of that cryptocurrency.

Transferring Between Wallets: Moving cryptocurrency between wallets or exchanges that you own and control (e.g., transferring WXT from your WEEX wallet to a MetaMask wallet) is not considered a taxable event. This is merely a transfer of your property from one location to another.

Holding Crypto: Simply holding cryptocurrency in your wallet without engaging in any selling, trading, or income-generating activities does not trigger a tax event. Taxes are only incurred when a taxable disposition occurs or income is realized.

Gifting Crypto: Gifting cryptocurrency to another person generally does not constitute a taxable event for the giver, provided the value of the gift is within the annual gift tax exclusion limit. For the 2024 tax year, this limit is $18,000 per person per year, increasing to $19,000 in 2025. If the value of the gift exceeds this annual exclusion, the giver may need to file Form 709 (United States Gift (and Generation-Skipping Transfer) Tax Return). However, gift tax is typically only owed if the giver's lifetime gift tax exemption (which is $13.61 million for 2024, and $13.99 million for 2025) is also exceeded. The recipient of the gift does not incur tax liability until they sell or exchange the gifted cryptocurrency.

How Are Crypto Gains Taxed?

Cryptocurrency gains are taxed as either capital gains or ordinary income, depending on the nature of the transaction and how long the asset was held.

Capital Gains Tax

When you dispose of cryptocurrency (sell, trade, or spend it) and realize a profit, capital gains tax applies. The gain or loss is calculated as the difference between the fair market value (FMV) at the time of disposition and your cost basis.

Short-Term Capital Gains: If you held the cryptocurrency for one year or less before disposing of it, any gain is considered a short-term capital gain and is taxed at your ordinary income tax rate. These rates range from 10% to 37%.

Example: You buy 1,000 WXT on WEEX for $10 ($0.01 per WXT) in January 2024. In June 2024, you sell 1,000 WXT for $25 ($0.025 per WXT). Your capital gain is $25 - $10 = $15. Since you held WXT for less than a year, this is a short-term capital gain, taxed at your income tax rate (e.g., 22% for a $15 gain = $3.30 tax).

Long-Term Capital Gains: If you held the cryptocurrency for more than one year before disposing of it, any gain is considered a long-term capital gain and is taxed at lower, preferential rates. These rates are typically 0%, 15%, or 20%.

Example: You buy 1 BTC for $30,000 in 2023. In 2024, you use 0.1 BTC (FMV $5,000) to pay for a service when 1 BTC is worth $50,000. Your cost basis for 0.1 BTC is $3,000 (0.1 × $30,000). Your capital gain is $5,000 - $3,000 = $2,000, taxed as a long-term gain if held over a year.

Holding Period Definition: The holding period formally begins on the day after you acquired the cryptocurrency and ends on the day you sell or exchange the cryptocurrency.

Long-Term Gain Exemption: For the 2024 tax year, if a single filer's total taxable income (including your crypto gains) is less than or equal to $47,025, your long-term capital gains will be taxed at 0%. This threshold increases to $48,350 for the 2025 tax year.

Utilizing Losses to Offset Gains (Tax-Loss Harvesting): You can use capital losses (e.g., selling cryptocurrency at a loss) to offset capital gains. If your net capital losses exceed your capital gains, you can deduct up to $3,000 of net losses from ordinary income each year. Any remaining losses can be carried forward to future years to offset future gains or income. Notably, crypto losses are generally not subject to the "wash-sale rule" that applies to traditional securities, offering greater flexibility.

Income Tax

Cryptocurrency received as income—such as from airdrops, staking rewards, mining, referral bonuses, or as payment for services—is taxed as ordinary income. The amount of income is based on the cryptocurrency's U.S. dollar fair market value (FMV) at the time of receipt. If cryptocurrency received as income is subsequently sold, any further profit from that sale will incur capital gains tax.

  • Example: In March 2024, you receive 500 WXT from a WEEX WE-Launch airdrop, valued at $12.50 ($0.025 per WXT). This $12.50 is taxed as ordinary income at your income tax rate (e.g., 22% = $2.75 tax). In September 2024, you sell the 500 WXT for $15 ($0.03 per WXT). Your capital gain is $15 - $12.50 = $2.50, taxed as a short-term capital gain (e.g., 22% = $0.55 tax).

2025 IRS Tax Rates

U.S. Federal Ordinary Income Tax Rates (2024 and 2025, Single Filers)

Tax Rate 2024 Taxable Income (Single)2025 Taxable Income (Single)
10%$0 – $11,600$0 – $11,925
12%$11,601 – $47,150$11,926 – $48,475
22%$47,151 – $100,525$48,476 – $103,350
24%$100,526 – $191,950$103,351 – $197,300
32%$191,951 – $243,725$197,301 – $250,525
35%$243,726 – $609,350$250,526 – $626,350
37%Over $609,350Over $626,350

U.S. Federal Long-Term Capital Gains Tax Rates (2024 and 2025, Single Filers)

Tax Rate 2024 Taxable Income (Single)2025 Taxable Income (Single)
0%$0 – $47,025$0 – $48,350
15%$47,026 – $518,900$48,351 – $533,400
20%Over $518,900Over $533,400

Please note: In addition to the above long-term capital gains rates, digital assets considered collectibles (e.g., certain NFTs) may be subject to a maximum long-term capital gains tax rate of 28%.

Calculating Your Cost Basis

Your cost basis is typically the amount you paid for the crypto, including any fees, commissions, and other acquisition costs, all measured in U.S. dollars. For cryptocurrency received as income (e.g., from airdrops or staking rewards), the cost basis is its U.S. dollar fair market value (FMV) at the time of receipt.

When you sell only a portion of your cryptocurrency holdings acquired at different times and prices, you need a consistent method to determine which specific units of cryptocurrency are being sold. The most commonly used method is First-In, First-Out (FIFO), which assumes that the earliest purchased cryptocurrency is the first one sold. While FIFO is widely used, taxpayers must apply their chosen method consistently across all transactions.

The IRS mandates that taxpayers maintain meticulous records for all cryptocurrency transactions. Comprehensive records are fundamental for accurate tax reporting and include:

  • The exact date and time of each transaction (acquisition and disposition).
  • The U.S. dollar fair market value (FMV) of the cryptocurrency at the time of acquisition and disposition.
  • The precise cost basis for each unit of cryptocurrency, including any associated fees.
  • The type and quantity of cryptocurrency involved in each transaction.
  • The specific purpose of the transaction (e.g., investment, service payment).
  • Receipts or verifiable documentation for all purchases, sales, or transfers.

Inaccurate, incomplete, or missing records can lead to significant errors in reporting, potential underpayment or overpayment of taxes, and may result in IRS penalties. While WEEX provides detailed transaction histories, it's important to remember that if you use multiple exchanges or self-custodied wallets, no single platform can provide a complete, integrated view of your entire portfolio's cost basis or overall tax liability. You are responsible for consolidating all transactions from all sources.

Reporting Crypto Taxes: What WEEX Users Need to Know

Understanding various IRS forms is a critical part of cryptocurrency tax compliance.

IRS Reporting Requirements

Form 1040: A mandatory "digital asset question" appears at the top of Form 1040, 1040-SR, and other federal income tax returns. You must check "yes" if you received or disposed of any digital assets during the tax year.

Form 8949: All capital gains and losses from cryptocurrency sales, trades, or dispositions must be reported on Form 8949 (Sales and Other Dispositions of Capital Assets ). This form details each individual transaction.

Schedule D: The total capital gains and losses from Form 8949 are then transferred to Schedule D (Form 1040) (Capital Gains and Losses).

Schedule 1: Cryptocurrency received as ordinary income (e.g., from airdrops, staking rewards, mining, or referral bonuses) should generally be reported on Schedule 1 (Form 1040) as "other income."

Schedule C: If the cryptocurrency was received as payment for services provided as an independent contractor or in connection with a trade or business, this income must be reported on Schedule C (Form 1040) (Profit or Loss from Business (Sole Proprietorship)).

Form W-2: If cryptocurrency was received as wages paid by an employer, its fair market value is subject to federal income tax withholding, Federal Insurance Contributions Act (FICA) tax, and Federal Unemployment Tax Act (FUTA) tax, and must be reported on Form W-2 (Wage and Tax Statement).

Key Update: New Form 1099-DA and Broker Reporting (2025-2027 Effective)

New regulations introduced in 2024 will significantly change how centralized cryptocurrency exchanges (brokers) report digital asset transactions to the IRS.

Beginning January 1, 2025 (for the 2025 tax year, filed in 2026): Crypto brokers, including digital asset trading platforms, payment processors, and hosted wallet providers (like WEEX), are required to issue Form 1099-DA to report the gross proceeds from their customers' digital asset sales and exchanges.

Beginning January 1, 2026 (for the 2026 tax year, filed in 2027): In addition to gross proceeds, brokers will also be required to report your cost basis for digital asset sales and exchanges on Form 1099-DA.

Tax Certification Requirements: To avoid potential backup withholding on their crypto sales or exchanges, starting in 2026, brokers will require users to complete tax certification forms (Form W-9 for U.S. taxpayers, Form W-8 for non-U.S. taxpayers).

Increased IRS Visibility: Form 1099-DA's primary goal is to provide a more accurate, standardized, and streamlined process for reporting digital asset transactions, thereby significantly improving tax accuracy and compliance. This increased visibility means the IRS will have a clearer understanding of individuals' cryptocurrency activities on centralized platforms, making it easier to identify discrepancies and non-compliance.

Please note: These new regulations generally do not apply to decentralized or non-custodial cryptocurrency exchanges, which follow separate rules. Even with Form 1099-DA, you are still responsible for reporting all trades, even without a form.

Record-Keeping Tips

The IRS requires you to maintain detailed records of:

  • Date and time of each transaction.
  • FMV in USD at the time of acquisition and disposal.
  • Cost basis and fees.
  • Receipts for purchases, sales, or transfers.

WEEX users can download transaction reports from the platform to streamline record-keeping. Store these securely and consider using crypto tax software for accuracy.

Utilizing Cryptocurrency Tax Calculators: WEEX and Beyond

Cryptocurrency tax calculators are digital tools designed to help individuals estimate their tax liability arising from cryptocurrency transactions. They typically work by calculating capital gains or losses and estimating taxes based on applicable federal (and in some cases, state) tax rates. These tools can significantly simplify the complex and time-consuming process of tracking and calculating numerous cryptocurrency transactions.

WEEX's Tax Calculator

Important Clarification: While you specifically asked about the WEEX tax calculator webpage at https://www.weex.com/tokens/bitcoin/tax-calculator, direct review of this URL did not yield information about its U.S. tax functionality. Other information suggests that any "Wayex" (likely WEEX) branded calculator may be a free tool provided by a third-party "Crypto Tax Calculator" and is explicitly designed for Australian ATO rules, providing only a "quick estimate" and not intended for accurate tax reporting. Such tools can estimate tax owed for activities like buying and selling, NFTs, airdrops, staking income, liquidity pool rewards, and leverage trading. They calculate capital gains/losses by comparing purchase and sale prices and treat income-generating activities based on their fair market value when received.

Key Limitations: Users must understand that free, simplified tools like this are generally for rough estimation purposes only and are not designed for comprehensive, accurate tax reporting required by the IRS. They may not account for state taxes, complex scenarios involving multiple transactions, or your entire cryptocurrency tax ecosystem. Additionally, some calculators may be based on outdated tax laws, which could lead to significant inaccuracies.

General Search Tips

Users can often find other token-specific tax calculator pages by searching online for "[token name] + tax Calculator." However, you should exercise extreme caution and carefully verify if the calculator is applicable to U.S. tax laws, its accuracy, and how frequently it is updated. Always prioritize tools that explicitly state compliance with IRS regulations for the relevant tax year.

Integrating with Third-Party Crypto Tax Software

For comprehensive, accurate, and IRS-compliant tax reporting, professional cryptocurrency tax software platforms (such as CoinTracker, Koinly, CoinLedger, or Recap) are strongly recommended. These powerful platforms offer significant advantages:

  • They can integrate with hundreds of cryptocurrency exchanges and wallets (including importing WEEX data via CSV export) to automate the tax calculation process for your entire portfolio.
  • They are designed to generate IRS-compliant forms, such as Form 8949 and Schedule D.
  • They accurately track and apply cost basis methods (like FIFO) across all transactions, even those spanning multiple platforms.
  • They correctly account for fees (including investment and exit fees), which can reduce total capital gains and thus your tax liability.

Top Tips for WEEX Users to Simplify Crypto Taxes and Avoid Common Mistakes

Top Tips for Simplifying Crypto Taxes

Track Every Transaction: Use WEEX’s transaction history to log all trades, airdrops, and staking rewards. Export data regularly to stay organized.

Use Crypto Tax Software: Platforms like CoinTracker, Koinly, or CoinLedger can integrate with WEEX to automate tax calculations and generate IRS-compliant forms.

Hold for Long-Term Gains: Holding WXT or BTC for over a year can reduce your tax rate to 0%–20% instead of 10%–37%.

Offset Gains with Losses: Report capital losses (e.g., selling WXT at a loss) to offset gains and reduce your tax bill. You can deduct up to $3,000 in net losses annually, with remaining losses carried forward.

Consult a Tax Professional: Work with a crypto-savvy accountant, especially if you trade frequently or earn significant income from WEEX’s staking or airdrops. They can provide personalized guidance and help optimize your tax situation.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Ignoring the Digital Asset Question: Always answer the IRS question on Form 1040 truthfully, even if you only held crypto or received it as income without selling.

Forgetting Income from Airdrops or Staking: WEEX’s WE-Launch airdrops and staking rewards are taxable as ordinary income when received.

Incomplete Records: Failing to track your cost basis, fair market value (FMV) at the time of each transaction, and all associated fees can lead to inaccurate reporting and potential IRS penalties.

Assuming Crypto-to-Crypto Trades Are Tax-Free: Trading one cryptocurrency for another (e.g., WXT for ETH on WEEX) is a taxable event, even if no fiat currency is involved.

Not Reporting Foreign Exchanges: If you trade on international platforms like WEEX, you are still responsible for reporting all taxable cryptocurrency transactions to the IRS, regardless of where they occur. Failure to include foreign transactions can result in underreported income and potential penalties.

How WEEX Supports Your Tax Compliance

At WEEX, we prioritize transparency and user support to make tax season easier:

Detailed Transaction History: Access all your trades, deposits, withdrawals, airdrops, and staking rewards directly in your WEEX account.

Low Fees: In normal circumstances, spot trading fees on WEEX are 0.1% for both makers and takers. But now the spot trading fees are 0% for makers and 0.1% for takers. Futures trading fees are 0.02% for makers and 0.08% for takers. Besides, WEEX sometimes offers trading fee reductions, so please check the latest event announcements!

Security: Our 1,000 BTC investor protection fund and MSB licenses in the U.S. ensure your funds are safe while you focus on trading and taxes.

24/7 Support: Contact our team at support@weex.com for help exporting transaction data or understanding your WEEX activities.

While WEEX doesn’t provide tax advice, our user-friendly platform and robust data tools empower you to stay organized and compliant.

FAQs

Do I need to pay taxes if I only hold WXT on WEEX?

No, simply holding WXT or other crypto in your WEEX wallet is not taxable. Taxes apply when you sell, trade, or earn income from crypto.

Are WEEX WE-Launch airdrops taxable?

Yes, airdrops like WXT or DOGS tokens are taxed as ordinary income based on their FMV when received. Later sales trigger capital gains tax.

How do I report WXT staking rewards?

Staking rewards from WXT are taxed as ordinary income when received. Report the FMV on Schedule 1 as “other income.”

Will WEEX send me a tax form?

Starting in 2025, WEEX may issue Form 1099-DA for transaction activity, but you’re responsible for reporting all trades, even without a form. Check your WEEX transaction history for details.

Can I reduce my crypto taxes?

Yes! Hold crypto for over a year for lower long-term capital gains rates, offset gains with losses, and use crypto tax software to ensure accuracy.

Conclusion: Trade Smart, Tax Smart with WEEX

Navigating U.S. crypto taxes doesn’t have to be daunting. By understanding taxable events, tracking your WEEX transactions, and leveraging tools like crypto tax software, you can stay compliant and minimize your tax burden. Whether you’re trading WXT , staking for rewards, or earning WE-Launch airdrops, WEEX’s transparent platform and low fees make it easier to manage your crypto journey.

Ready to trade with confidence? Join over 5 million users on WEEX today, enjoy up to 70% trading fee discounts with WXT , and take control of your crypto taxes in 2025! Sign up on WEEX now to start trading, staking, and earning airdrops—all while staying tax-ready!

You may also like

How to Invest in Bitcoin (BTC) 2026: 2 Best Ways to Buy Bitcoin

Bitcoin hit $99,500 in November 2024 — just shy of the historic $100,000 mark. That is a 150%+ increase from its January price of around $40,000.

But here is the real story: Bitcoin is no longer just for crypto enthusiasts. Institutions like BlackRock, Fidelity, and MicroStrategy are piling in. Countries like Bhutan and El Salvador are holding Bitcoin as a strategic reserve asset. And with Bitcoin ETFs now managing over $100 billion in assets, regulated investment vehicles have opened the door for everyday investors.

So, how do you invest in Bitcoin in 2026? This guide walks you through five practical methods — from beginner-friendly exchanges to advanced trading platforms. No matter your experience level, you will find a way that fits your comfort zone and financial goals.

What is Bitcoin(BTC)?

Launched in 2009, Bitcoin is a cryptocurrency that enables peer-to-peer transactions without banks or governments. Unlike traditional currencies, it operates on a decentralized network of computers worldwide.

Transactions are verified through cryptography and recorded on a public blockchain ledger. This open system allows anyone to participate in Bitcoin's borderless financial ecosystem.

Why Is Everyone Talking About Bitcoin Right Now?

Before we dive into the "how," let us quickly cover the "why."

Institutional adoption is the main driver.

MicroStrategy now holds over 386,000 BTC (including 134,480 BTC bought in November 2024 alone — worth ~$12.5 billion)BlackRock and Fidelity have launched successful Bitcoin ETFs, attracting billions in inflowsBhutan holds 13,000+ BTC (~$1.3 billion) as part of its national reserves

These are not retail degens. These are sovereign nations and Wall Street giants.

Add Bitcoin's built-in scarcity (only 21 million coins will ever exist), and you can see why analysts are throwing around long-term targets as high as $1 million per coin.

How to Invest in Bitcoin (BTC)

Here are the most common ways to buy Bitcoin in 2026, ranked from easiest to most advanced.

Buy Bitcoin on WEEX Exchange

This is where most people start. WEEX Exchange lets you buy Bitcoin with fiat currency (USD, EUR, etc.) using a bank transfer, credit card, or even Apple Pay.

Step-by-Step Guide: How to Buy Bitcoin on WEEX Exchange?

Follow these steps to complete your first purchase in under 5 minutes.

Step 1: Create & Verify Your AccountGo to the official WEEX website or download the iOS/Android app.Click "Sign Up" and register with your email or phone number.Complete KYC verification.Step 2: Deposit Funds

Navigate to "Assets" → "Deposit". You have two options:

Fiat Deposit: Use a bank transfer, credit/debit card, or third-party providers.Crypto Deposit: If you already own crypto, send USDT or BTC to your WEEX wallet.Step 3: Execute Your Bitcoin Purchase

WEEX offers two primary methods to buy Bitcoin:

Method 1: Instant BuyGo to "Buy Crypto" → "Quick Buy".Select Bitcoin (BTC) and your fiat currency (e.g., USD, EUR).Enter the amount you want to spend.Choose your payment method (e.g., Apple Pay, Google Pay, or card).Review and confirm. Bitcoin is delivered instantly to your spot wallet.Method 2: Spot Trading

If you want to buy at a specific price or use a market order:

Navigate to "Trade" → "Spot:Search for the BTC/USDT trading pair.Choose a Market Order (buy immediately at the current price) or a Limit Order (set your target price).Enter the amount and execute the trade.Buy Bitcoin via Peer-to-Peer (P2P)

WEEX P2P is a peer‑to‑peer trading platform that connects buyers and sellers directly — letting you pay USD and receive Bitcoin (or other supported cryptocurrencies) without complicated steps. This model gives you greater flexibility and control over your trades, compared to traditional centralized exchanges. On WEEX, you only trade with other verified users and use escrow protection to ensure fairness. The platform supports a variety of local payment methods and other fiat currencies.

Grabbing crypto on WEEX feels like a seamless UPI top-up—no jargon, no waits. Here's your quick path, straight from the app:

Sign Up & Verify: Download WEEX (iOS/Android/web), enter your phone/email, set a password—done in 20 seconds. Complete KYC (under 60 seconds approval, unlocking full limits).Select an offer: Select an offer with your preferred price and payment method. After you enter the amount you want to buy and place your order, WEEX P2P will hold the crypto in escrowPay the seller: Send money to the seller via the suggested payment methods. Complete the fiat transaction and use the "Transfer Complete" button to notify the seller on WEEX P2P. WEEX will not charge any fees.Receive crypto: Once the seller confirms receipt of payment, the escrowed bitcoin will be released to your Funding Account.

Also, you can check out this video to know more about WEEX P2P.

Final Thoughts: Should I Invest in Bitcoin in 2026?

Bitcoin has come a long way from being an experimental internet currency. Today, it is held by Wall Street giants, sovereign nations, and millions of everyday investors. Its fixed supply of 21 million coins makes it a unique hedge against inflation — especially when central banks keep printing money.

That said, Bitcoin remains volatile. Prices can swing dramatically. Do your own research, never invest more than you can afford to lose, and consider dollar-cost averaging to smooth out the ride.

Ready to trade? WEEX offers zero fees, instant execution, and the security you need. Sign up on WEEX Now and Start Trading!

FAQIs Bitcoin a good investment in 2026?

Bitcoin has shown strong institutional adoption and price growth, reaching $99,500 in late 2024. However, it remains volatile. It is suitable for investors with high risk tolerance and a long-term horizon.

How much Bitcoin should I buy?

There is no minimum. You can buy as little as $10 worth of Bitcoin on most exchanges. A common strategy is dollar-cost averaging (DCA) — buying small amounts regularly instead of lump sums.

What is the best way to buy Bitcoin for beginners?

The easiest method is using a centralized exchange like WEEX. Sign up, deposit funds, and buy Bitcoin in minutes. Just remember to withdraw to a personal wallet if you plan to hold long-term.

Decentralized Exchange (DEX): Benefits, Risks, and How It Works in 2026

A Decentralized Exchange (DEX) is changing how people trade crypto. Instead of depositing funds into a company-controlled account, a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) lets users swap tokens directly from their own wallets through smart contracts. In 2026, the Decentralized Exchange (DEX) model is no longer just for DeFi power users. It is now a mainstream part of crypto market structure.

That matters because more traders now care about self-custody, transparency, and direct access to on-chain markets. But DEXs are not automatically better in every situation. They offer real benefits, yet they also come with real risks, including smart contract bugs, slippage, MEV, and weak token quality. If you are new to crypto, this guide explains what a DEX is, how it works, which major DEXs matter in 2026, and what to watch before making your first trade.

What Is a Decentralized Exchange (DEX)?

A Decentralized Exchange (DEX) is a peer-to-peer crypto marketplace that executes trades on a blockchain through smart contracts. Users connect a wallet, approve a transaction, and settle the trade on-chain instead of trusting a centralized platform to hold funds and process orders internally.

This is the biggest difference in the DEX vs CEX debate. A centralized exchange usually controls custody, order matching, and settlement inside its own systems. A DEX removes that central custodian from the trade itself. The protocol handles execution, while the user keeps control of the wallet.

For beginners, this creates three obvious advantages. First, you keep custody of your assets. Second, transactions are transparent because settlement happens on-chain. Third, a DEX often gives faster access to new ecosystems and tokens.

But there is a tradeoff. On a DEX, you are more responsible for what you sign, which token you buy, which contract you approve, and how much slippage you accept. More control also means more responsibility.

How a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) Works

Most DEXs today use either an automated market maker (AMM) model or an order book model.

An AMM uses liquidity pools rather than matching a buyer and seller directly. The basic AMM formula is:

x * y = k

Here, x and y are the quantities of two assets in the pool, while k stays constant. When someone buys one asset, the balance changes, and the price adjusts automatically to keep the equation in balance.

A simple example helps. Imagine a pool with 100 ETH and 265,000 USDT. If a trader buys ETH from that pool, the ETH balance falls and the USDT balance rises. Because the ratio changes, the next buyer pays a higher price. This is why larger trades on smaller pools often create more price impact.

Other DEXs use an order book, where users place bids and asks just like on a more traditional exchange. These platforms are often better for traders who want precise entries, visible market depth, and advanced order types. In 2026, faster chains and Layer 2 networks made decentralized order books more practical than they were a few years ago.

There is also a newer approach called intent-based trading. Instead of manually choosing the route, users state the result they want, and external solvers compete to provide the best execution. This model is becoming more relevant because it can reduce routing inefficiency and improve execution quality in fragmented multi-chain markets.

DEX trading also includes network fees. On Ethereum-style networks, gas cost is commonly expressed as:

Gas Cost = Gas Used × (Base Fee + Priority Fee)

That matters because a low swap fee can still become an expensive trade if the network is congested.

Benefits and Risks of Using a Decentralized Exchange (DEX)

The biggest benefit of a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) is self-custody. You keep control of your private keys and do not have to trust an exchange to hold your assets. After years of exchange failures, hacks, and frozen withdrawals in crypto, this remains one of the strongest reasons people prefer DEXs.

Another major benefit is transparency. A DEX settles on-chain, so liquidity, transaction history, and contract behavior are more visible than they are inside a closed internal ledger. DEXs also support permissionless access, which means users can often reach new assets and ecosystems faster than they can on centralized venues.

But the risks are just as real.

The first is smart contract risk. If the protocol has a bug or the user interacts with a malicious contract, funds can be lost. The second is slippage, which can hit hard when liquidity is shallow or volatility spikes. The third is impermanent loss, which affects liquidity providers when the relative price of pooled assets changes sharply. In that case, the provider may end up with a worse outcome than simply holding the assets in a wallet.

Then there is MEV, or maximal extractable value. On public blockchains, bots can monitor pending trades and sometimes profit by moving around them. This is one reason sandwich attacks remain a known issue in DEX trading.

So a DEX does not remove risk. It shifts risk from a centralized company to the user, the wallet, and the protocol design.

Mainstream DEXs Beginners Should Know in 2026

Not all DEXs do the same job. In 2026, several names stand out because of their liquidity, adoption, or market niche.

Uniswap remains one of the most recognized DEXs, especially for Ethereum and major Layer 2 users. It is still the clearest example of an AMM-based decentralized exchange.

PancakeSwap continues to be highly relevant for retail traders, especially in BNB Chain and broader multi-chain token markets.

Jupiter is one of the most important names in the Solana ecosystem because it acts as both a trading interface and a major routing layer for swaps.

Raydium remains a key Solana DEX for liquidity-pool-based trading and access to Solana-native token activity.

Aerodrome has become a major liquidity hub on Base, which matters because Base keeps growing as a retail-friendly on-chain environment.

CoW Protocol stands out for users who care about execution quality and MEV-aware design, thanks to its batch-auction and solver-based model.

For beginners, the takeaway is simple: the best DEX depends on the chain, the token, the liquidity depth, and the kind of trade you want to make.

Why DEXs Matter More in 2026

The rise of DEXs is not just a theory story. It is a market-structure story.

Our research brief shows that by early 2026, decentralized exchanges were facilitating nearly 20% of global spot trading volume. That is a major shift. It means DEXs are no longer a small DeFi corner. They are now a serious part of crypto trading infrastructure.

A big reason is cost and speed. Layer 2 networks and alternative high-throughput chains made DEX trading much more practical for normal users.

Snapshot of DEX Trading Costs in 2026NetworkAvg. Swap Fee (2026)Approx. TPSWhy It MattersEthereum L1$5.00 to $40.00~15Deep liquidity, but expensive for smaller usersArbitrum One~$0.0044~400Strong DeFi liquidity with lower costBase~$0.01611000+Retail-friendly and easier for everyday swapsOptimism~$0.0007~300Very low-cost on-chain tradingSolana<$0.0012000+Fast and cheap for active trading

These numbers explain why DEX usage kept growing. When on-chain execution becomes fast and cheap enough, more users are willing to trade without giving up custody.

Conclusion

A Decentralized Exchange (DEX) gives users direct access to crypto trading through wallets and smart contracts instead of centralized custody. That creates meaningful advantages, including self-custody, transparency, and easier access to on-chain markets. But a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) also comes with real tradeoffs, including smart contract risk, slippage, impermanent loss, and MEV-related execution problems.

If you are new to crypto, the best approach is not to treat every DEX as automatically safe or automatically better. Start small, use trusted protocols, verify token contracts, and understand every approval before signing. Once you understand how a Decentralized Exchange (DEX) works in 2026, you will be in a much better position to trade on-chain with confidence.

FAQ

What is a Decentralized Exchange (DEX)?
A Decentralized Exchange (DEX) is a crypto trading platform that lets users trade directly from their own wallets using smart contracts.

How does a DEX work?
Most DEXs use AMMs or order books. AMMs rely on liquidity pools and pricing formulas, while order book DEXs match bids and asks more directly.

What are the main benefits of a DEX?
The main benefits are self-custody, transparency, permissionless access, and direct participation in DeFi markets.

What are the main risks of a DEX?
The biggest risks include smart contract bugs, slippage, impermanent loss, MEV, scam tokens, and user mistakes.

Which DEXs are popular in 2026?
Among the best-known names in 2026 are Uniswap, PancakeSwap, Jupiter, Raydium, Aerodrome, and CoW Protocol.

51% Attacks Explained: How Blockchains Get Rewritten

51% Attacks are one of the clearest ways to understand how blockchain security really works. 51% Attacks do not break private keys, but they can break trust in transaction history. When 51% Attacks succeed, an attacker can reverse recent payments, trigger deep chain reorganizations, and exploit exchanges or merchants that assume a transaction is already final.

For anyone researching blockchain risk, this matters because the real danger behind 51% Attacks is not just technical. It is economic. A chain is only as secure as the cost of overpowering its consensus. In this guide, you will learn what 51% attacks are, how they work, what attackers can and cannot do, and why some blockchains are far more exposed than others.

What Are 51% Attacks?

A 51% attack happens when one miner, validator set, or coordinated group controls enough consensus power to influence which version of the blockchain becomes the accepted history. In Proof of Work networks, that usually means controlling a majority of hash power. In other consensus systems, the threshold for disruption may differ, but the principle stays the same: one actor gains enough influence to undermine honest participants.

In practice, 51% attacks are usually associated with chain reorganizations. The attacker secretly builds an alternative version of the chain while the public network continues operating normally. If the attacker’s private chain becomes heavier or longer under the protocol’s rules, the network may accept it as canonical. That is where recent transactions can be erased or replaced.

This is why 51% attacks are so dangerous for exchanges, payment processors, and merchants. A transaction may look confirmed, yet still be vulnerable if the network’s finality is weak and the attacker can outpace honest block production.

How 51% Attacks Work in Crypto

The classic attack path is a double-spend.


First, the attacker sends coins to an exchange or merchant. The transaction enters the public chain and receives the required confirmations. Once the platform credits the deposit, the attacker trades the funds for another asset or withdraws value elsewhere.

At the same time, the attacker privately mines or validates a competing chain that excludes the original payment. Because the attacker controls the majority of consensus power, this hidden chain can eventually overtake the public one. Once the attacker has already extracted value, they publish the private chain. Honest nodes then follow the protocol rules and accept the stronger chain, while the original deposit disappears from canonical history.

The result is simple but severe: the exchange or merchant loses value, and the attacker keeps the proceeds.

This also explains why 51% attacks are often described as consensus attacks rather than wallet hacks. The attacker is not stealing your private key. The attacker is rewriting the order of transactions the network agrees to recognize.

What 51% Attacks Can and Cannot Do

A successful attacker can:

Reverse their own recent transactionsDelay or censor new transactionsTrigger deep chain reorganizationsUndermine settlement confidence on weaker chains

A successful attacker usually cannot:

Steal coins from wallets they do not controlForge signatures for another userMint unlimited coins outside protocol rulesFreely rewrite finalized history in networks with strong finality defenses

That distinction is critical. Many newer users hear “51% attacks” and assume attackers can drain any wallet on the network. That is not how this threat works. The real damage comes from broken finality, not broken cryptography.

Why Smaller Chains Face Higher 51% Attack Risk

Not every blockchain faces the same exposure. Large networks with massive, globally distributed mining or staking power are much harder to attack. Smaller networks, especially minority Proof of Work chains, often carry far more risk.

One reason is the rise of hash-rental markets. Attackers do not always need to own mining hardware outright. If enough hash power can be rented for a short period, the cost of launching 51% attacks falls dramatically. That makes smaller chains with lower security budgets much easier to exploit.

Historical cases show this clearly. 

Targeted Network

Attack Period

Exploited Value (Estimated)

Attack Vector and Operational Notes

Bitcoin Gold (BTG)

May 2018

~$18 Million

Double-spend targeting exchanges via massive rented hash power, utilizing wallet GTNjvCGssb2rbLnDV1xxsHmunQdvXnY2Ft.

Ethereum Classic (ETC)

January 2019

~$1.1 Million

Successful double-spend through deep chain reorganization.

Expanse (EXP)

July 2019

Undisclosed

Detected via deep reorg tracking monitoring systems.

Litecoin Cash (LCC)

July 2019

Undisclosed

Chain reorganization detected exceeding 6 blocks deep.

Vertcoin (VTC)

December 2019

Undisclosed

51% attack resulting in deep chain reorganization and network disruption.

Bitcoin Gold (BTG)

Jan/Feb 2020

~$70,000+

Secondary attack exposing the continued vulnerability of the network.

Ethereum Classic (ETC)

August 2020

~$5.6 Million

Coordinated DaggerHashimoto rental via NiceHash; targeting OKEX.

Why 51% Attacks Are Not the Whole Story

The phrase “51% attacks” is useful, but it can oversimplify the real security model.

Research on selfish mining shows that attackers may not always need a full majority to distort network incentives. By withholding blocks and strategically releasing them, a coordinated mining group can waste honest miners’ work and gain an unfair advantage. Under some conditions, this creates centralization pressure long before a full majority is reached.

Modern blockchain security therefore depends on more than just one number. It depends on network propagation, miner or validator distribution, economic incentives, and how finality is enforced.

That is why newer systems increasingly rely on stronger finality mechanisms. In Proof of Stake and BFT-style designs, deep rollbacks can become far more costly because they require slashable behavior, supermajority failure, or direct economic loss. Some networks also use anti-reorg systems and checkpoint-based defenses to reduce the attacker’s payoff window.

The big takeaway is this: 51% attacks reveal whether a network has real security depth or only superficial decentralization.

How to Evaluate a Blockchain’s Defense Against 51% Attacks

If you are evaluating a chain, ask these questions:

How expensive is it to control enough consensus power to disrupt the network?Can that power be rented cheaply from outside markets?Does the chain rely only on probabilistic confirmations, or does it have stronger finality?How concentrated are miners or validators?How do exchanges and infrastructure providers handle reorg risk?

These questions matter more than marketing language. A blockchain may promise speed, low fees, or accessibility, but if its consensus can be cheaply overwhelmed, those benefits come with a real tradeoff.

Conclusion

51% Attacks remain one of the most important concepts in blockchain security because they expose the gap between apparent confirmation and true finality. 51% Attacks do not let someone break your wallet keys, but they can let attackers reverse payments, exploit exchanges, and rewrite recent chain history when consensus becomes too concentrated or too cheap to control.

If you want to assess crypto risk seriously, do not just ask whether a chain is popular. Ask how it handles reorganizations, how expensive majority control really is, and what defenses stand between honest users and successful 51% Attacks. That is where blockchain trust is either earned or exposed.

Learn more about consensus design, finality, and exchange risk before you rely on any blockchain for serious value transfer.

FAQ

Q1:What are 51% attacks in simple terms?

51% attacks happen when one actor controls enough consensus power to influence which blockchain history the network accepts as valid.

Q2:Can 51% attacks steal funds from my wallet?

Not directly. They usually cannot steal coins from a wallet without the private key, but they can reverse recent transactions and disrupt settlement.

Q3:Which blockchains are most vulnerable to 51% attacks?

Smaller Proof of Work chains are often more exposed, especially when hash power can be rented cheaply from external markets.

Q4:Are Proof of Stake networks immune to 51% attacks?

No. They change the attack model, but they are not automatically immune to censorship, disruption, or finality-related attacks.

Q5:Why do exchanges care so much about 51% attacks?

Because exchanges can lose money if a deposit appears confirmed, gets credited, and is later erased by a chain reorganization.

Crypto AMA Explained (2026 Guide): How Ask Me Anything Works

What Is an AMA in Crypto?

If you have ever searched "what is AMA in crypto," you are not alone. A crypto AMA (Ask Me Anything) is a live Q&A session where project founders, developers, exchange representatives, or influencers answer questions directly from the community in real time. Unlike traditional interviews that often feel scripted and polished, AMAs foster direct and honest dialogue because respondents are expected to answer on the spot, making it significantly harder to mislead the audience. The primary goals of AMAs are transparency, community engagement, marketing reach, and investor relations. For anyone looking to join, run, or evaluate crypto AMAs, understanding the formats, risks, and best practices is essential before participating.

The History and Evolution of Crypto AMAs

The AMA format started on forums like Reddit, where public figures and project teams held typed Q&A sessions. Over time, crypto communities adopted AMAs because the format naturally fits a decentralized, global audience that values direct access to decision-makers. Text-based AMAs remained popular on forums and chat apps due to their permanence and easy archiving.

AMAs evolved quickly from simple text threads to multi-format events. Audio and video formats emerged as platforms added live voice and video features, and influencers alongside exchanges began co-hosting AMAs to amplify reach. Today, AMAs are a standard communication tool for token launches, protocol upgrades, NFT drops, audit reports, and governance discussions.

AMA Formats and Platforms

Live text AMAs take place on platforms like Reddit, Discord, or Telegram. They are easy to archive and search, with straightforward moderation that allows hosts to pin answers and remove spam.

Live audio and video AMAs occur on Twitter Spaces, YouTube Live, or Twitch. They enable a conversational tone and real-time interaction, though moderation is harder and mistakes cannot be edited out. Pre-submitted AMAs collect questions in advance, reducing surprises and legal exposure, making this format ideal for sensitive topics like security breaches.

Panel AMAs feature multiple experts discussing governance, audits, or partnerships, offering deeper insights but requiring complex coordination. Each format has tradeoffs, and hosts should choose based on their goals and the sensitivity of the topics being discussed.

How AMA Works

Most AMAs follow a predictable structure that balances promotion, moderation, and recordkeeping. First, the host announces the date, time, platform, and speakers via official channels. Next, questions are submitted through forms, pinned threads, or live chat, and moderators prioritize high-value questions while removing spam and duplicates. During the live session, speakers respond, balancing prepared scripts for sensitive topics with spontaneous answers for follow-up questions. After the session ends, hosts publish transcripts and recordings for late viewers and to maintain a permanent record. This workflow reduces misinformation risk and improves the event's credibility.

Common topics covered in AMAs include:

Roadmap and milestones, tokenomics, and security auditsPartnerships, listings, governance, and legal complianceAMA-Related Scams: How to Stay Safe

Scammers frequently target AMAs using a variety of tactics. Fake AMA announcements with malicious links lure users to phishing sites. Fraudulent giveaways request private keys or seed phrases to claim prizes. Impersonators create fake moderator or speaker accounts to deceive attendees. To stay safe, always verify AMA details only through official project channels including the website and verified social media accounts. Never share your private keys or seed phrases, and never sign transactions to "claim" giveaways. If you spot impersonation or fraud, report it to moderators and platform support immediately. A cautious approach protects both your funds and your personal information.

The Impact of AMAs on Token Prices

AMAs can influence short-term market behavior, especially when they contain new, material information. Positive news such as a major partnership or exchange listing may increase demand and trading volume, while ambiguous or forward-looking statements can trigger speculative trading. Because AMAs reach many retail participants at once, volatility is common. Projects sometimes report increased on-chain activity and order volumes within 24 hours of a high-profile AMA. Investors should always verify claims through official announcements before making trading decisions based on AMA content.

Final Thoughts: Are Crypto AMAs Worth Your Time?

For investors and community members, crypto AMAs offer a rare opportunity to hear directly from project decision-makers in an unscripted environment. They can provide valuable insights, clarify technical details, and reveal how teams respond under pressure. However, they also carry risks including misinformation, selective answering, and potential market manipulation. The key to benefiting from AMAs is preparation. Research the project beforehand, prepare specific questions, and never treat live answers as financial advice. For hosts, a well-run AMA builds trust and community loyalty. For participants, a cautious approach protects both your capital and your peace of mind.

FAQQ1: What does AMA stand for in crypto?

AMA stands for "Ask Me Anything." It is a live Q&A session where crypto project teams answer community questions directly.

Q2: How do I find legitimate crypto AMAs?

Check official project channels including their website, verified Twitter/X accounts, Telegram, and Discord. Never trust AMA announcements from unofficial sources or direct messages.

Q3: Are crypto AMAs safe to participate in?

Yes, if you follow security best practices. Never share private keys, seed phrases, or sign transactions to claim rewards. Always verify details through official channels.

Q4: Can AMAs affect cryptocurrency prices?

Yes. Material announcements made during AMAs, such as new partnerships or exchange listings, can cause short-term price volatility. Always verify claims through official announcements.

Q5: What is the difference between a text AMA and Twitter Spaces?

Text AMAs are typed Q&A sessions that are easy to archive and search. Twitter Spaces are live audio sessions that allow real-time conversation but are harder to moderate and edit.

With the World Cup hype building, which tokens are worth keeping an eye on?

As an official partner of LaLiga, WEEX believes that the principles of rules, fairness and long-term value emphasised in sporting events align closely with WEEX’s ongoing commitment to trading security, risk management systems and user experience. We are also actively promoting brand communication and interactive activities that incorporate sports culture. This article will provide a detailed analysis of which tokens are worth keeping an eye on against the backdrop of this June’s World Cup.

 

The 2026 World Cup, co-hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico, will kick off on 11 June and culminate in the final on 19 July, spanning 39 days. With an expanded field of 48 teams, 104 matches and 16 host cities, this tournament is the largest World Cup in history.

Currently, the latest data from prediction market Polymarket shows Spain leading the favourites with a 16% probability of winning, followed closely by France (14%), England (11%), Argentina (9%) and Brazil (9%).

 

On 28 March, as excitement builds ahead of the World Cup, the fan token sector has already seen a collective surge: CHZ rose by 13% in a single day, SANTOS gained 11%, ASR climbed 7%, and GALFT has continued to rise steadily in small increments; the market appears to have begun pricing in expectations for the tournament.

In fact, looking back at major events such as the 2022 Qatar World Cup and the 2024 European Championship, sports and fan tokens led by CHZ all saw remarkable gains. This demonstrates that anticipation of the events themselves serves as a powerful catalyst for speculation in this sector.

Let’s take a look at which tokens are worth keeping a close eye on.

Click here to trade:

CHZ/USDT

GALFT/USDT

BAR/USDT

ARG/USDT

PSG/USDT

SANTOS/USDT

AFC/USDT

OG/USDT

 

Chiliz (CHZ)

Founded in 2018, Chiliz is the undisputed leader in the sports crypto sector. Its fan engagement platform, Socios.com, has amassed over 5 million registered users and partners with top-tier clubs such as FC Barcelona and Paris Saint-Germain.

CHZ serves as the base currency for purchasing all Socios fan tokens, whilst also functioning as the gas fee token for the Chiliz Chain; on-chain transactions trigger the burning of a portion of CHZ, creating deflationary pressure.

2026 marks a pivotal milestone in Chiliz’s Vision 2030 strategy: the company plans to re-enter the US market with an investment of between $50 million and $100 million, and has already obtained EU MiCA regulatory certification, enabling it to reach 450 million EU users in compliance with regulations. The host nation effect in the North American market, combined with the new issuance of tokens for multiple national teams, means that CHZ’s catalytic impact during this World Cup could exceed that of 2022.

However, historically, CHZ has experienced significant pullbacks following every World Cup, so investors should pay particular attention to market rotation.

Galatasaray Fan Token (GALFT)

GALFT is the official fan token of Istanbul’s prestigious football club Galatasaray, issued via the Socios.com platform. It is one of the earliest European top-tier club tokens to be launched within the Socios ecosystem. Holders can participate in club decision-making votes, gain priority access to home match tickets and signed merchandise, whilst also enjoying exclusive opportunities to interact with the club’s legends; voting weight is linked to the number of tokens held.

The Turkish national team has recently performed impressively in the qualifiers and took a crucial step towards the World Cup finals with a 1-0 victory over Romania on 26 March. Several key Galatasaray players have been selected for their respective national teams squads for the 2026 World Cup, or the ongoing critical stages of the qualifiers, which may be a key reason for GALFT’s recent counter-trend rise and speculative fervour.

FC Barcelona Fan Token (BAR)

BAR is one of the first top-tier club tokens issued on the Socios platform, backed by one of the football clubs with the broadest global fan base, which is called FC Barcelona. Token holders can participate in club-related voting, gain access to exclusive content, and qualify for official merchandise. As Barcelona was an early core partner in the Chiliz ecosystem, BAR was once a benchmark asset in the fan token sector.

In this World Cup, Spain tops the prediction markets with a 16% chance of winning, and Barcelona-affiliated players, such as Yamal and Pedri, are expected to feature heavily in the Spanish national team. Should Spain continue to progress in the tournament, the knock-on effect of Spain fever is likely to provide additional support for BAR.

BAR has recently seen a weekly increase of 8%, a slightly slow start, but it has begun to catch up.

Argentine Football Association Fan Token (ARG)

ARG is the official national team token issued by the Argentine Football Association (AFA) on the Socios platform, and is one of the few tokens on this watchlist directly tied to a World Cup-qualifying national team.

Unlike club tokens, the price movements of national team tokens are more directly correlated with the World Cup schedule – every match Argentina progresses to could act as a catalyst for ARG’s price. Holders can participate in official interactions such as voting on kit designs and shirt number selections, and win match tickets and VIP stadium experiences via the Socios app.

It is worth noting that should Messi lead his team deep into the tournament, the level of attention and hype surrounding this national team token is set to rise significantly.

Paris Saint-Germain Fan Token (PSG)

PSG is the official fan token of French Ligue 1 giants Paris Saint-Germain, and alongside BAR, one of the first top-tier club tokens to be launched on the Socios platform.

PSG boasts a vast fan base across Asia, the Middle East and Europe, and its token holders are spread across a wide international audience, which contributes to the token’s relatively high trading activity.

In this World Cup, France ranks third with an 14% chance of winning the title, and several PSG players, including former teammates of Mbappé, which is now at Real Madrid, and current first-team regulars, will be representing the national side.

Historically, whenever the French team has performed impressively in major tournaments, the PSG token has shown a clear correlation with market sentiment.

It is worth noting that the PSG token has risen by 8% over the past week, demonstrating strong momentum and placing it in the upper-middle tier among mainstream fan tokens.

Santos FC Fan Token (SANTOS)

SANTOS is the official fan token of Santos Football Club, the renowned São Paulo-based team, issued by the club itself and distinct from the Socios system.

Holders enjoy exclusive voting rights, autographed memorabilia and specific experience benefits at the Vila Belmiro stadium.

As a representative club of Brazil, SANTOS holds strong emotional appeal amongst South American fans. Given that Brazil is a major favourite to win this World Cup, with a 9% probability of victory on Polymarket, the growing interest in South American themes may bring additional attention to SANTOS.

Arsenal Fan Token (AFC)

AFC is the official fan token issued by Premier League giants Arsenal on the Socios.com platform.

Token holders can participate in customising matchday experiences, exclusive club voting and fan engagement activities, whilst accumulating reward points via the Socios app.

One of the most notable features of the AFC token is its relative decoupling from the club’s on-pitch performance: data shows that during Arsenal’s 10-match winning streak in the league at the end of 2025, the AFC token rose by over 30%, whilst Bitcoin fell by 7.6% over the same period, demonstrating the fan token’s ability to trade independently in specific contexts.

Meanwhile, the England national team has a 11% probability of winning the World Cup on Polymarket, making them one of the favourites for the tournament, with several Arsenal players selected for the Three Lions squad. Should England’s campaign progress well, the AFC token is likely to receive an additional boost in sentiment during the World Cup cycle.

OG Fan Token (OG)

The background of the OG Fan Token is entirely different from other football-related tokens. It originates from the esports sector. Founded in 2015 and specialising in Dota 2, OG is the only team in history to have won The International (TI) twice in 2018 and 2019, with total prize winnings exceeding $26.6 million.

In March 2020, OG became the first esports club to launch on the Socios.com platform, pioneering the introduction of fan tokens to the esports sector.

Whilst its price drivers have relatively low correlation with football events, OG’s esports team is set to participate in major tournaments this year, including the IEM Cologne Major 2026, the 2026 Esports World Cup, the Honor of Kings World Cup 2026 and The International 2026 (TI 15), which may drive price volatility.

 

In summary, as the world’s largest sporting IP this year, the 2026 World Cup typically provides a significant catalyst for CHZ and fan tokens during its pre-event build-up phase. However, historical experience suggests that price speculation peaks tend to occur around the time of the event’s opening, rather than during or after the event itself; investors should therefore remain vigilant for signals indicating the end of the speculative rally.

 

More:

Champions League Fan Token 0% Fee Campaign https://www.weex.com/events/promo/ucl-rewards

What is ATL (all-time low) in Crypto? How to Use ATL in Crypto Trading? Complete Guide 2026

In crypto trading, few numbers grab attention like an all-time low (ATL). It is the lowest price a cryptocurrency has ever reached since it started trading. Think of it as the opposite of an all-time high (ATH). While ATHs make headlines during bull runs, ATLs often appear during fear, panic, or market crashes.

But an ATL is not just a scary number. For smart traders, it can be a signal of opportunity or a warning of further downside. This guide explains what ATL means, why it matters, how to use it in your trading strategy, and real examples of coins that bounced back — or never did.

What Is ATL (All-Time Low) in Crypto?

An all-time low (ATL) is the lowest price a cryptocurrency has ever traded at since its public launch. Every coin has one. For Bitcoin, its ATL is basically zero when it first traded. For newer tokens, the ATL might be just days old.

ATL is a purely historical metric. It tells you where a coin has been, not where it is going. However, when a crypto approaches its ATL, traders pay close attention because it often triggers one of two reactions:

Buyers step in – They see a potential bargain if the project is fundamentally sound.Sellers keep pushing – The coin may break its ATL and set a new low.

Understanding this dynamic helps you make better entry and exit decisions.

Why Is ATL Important for Crypto Traders?

ATL matters because it reflects the lowest level of investor confidence and price discovery. Here are three main reasons traders track ATL:

Spotting Potential Buying Opportunities

Value investors look for coins trading near their ATL but with strong fundamentals. If a project has a working product, active development, and community support, an ATL might be a great entry point.

For example, Cardano (ADA) hit an ATL of $0.01735 in March 2020. Those who bought near that level saw gains of over 17,700% when ADA later reached its ATH of $3.09.

Measuring Bear Market Bottoms

ATLs often occur during the final stages of a bear market, when fear is at its peak. Once sellers exhaust themselves, buyers may step in, forming a bottom. Recognizing this pattern can help you avoid panic selling.

Setting Risk Management Levels

Traders use ATL as a reference for stop-loss orders. If you buy near an ATL, placing a stop-loss slightly below it limits your downside if the coin breaks lower.

ATL vs. ATH: What’s the Difference?

td {white-space:nowrap;border:0.5pt solid #dee0e3;font-size:10pt;font-style:normal;font-weight:normal;vertical-align:middle;word-break:normal;word-wrap:normal;}

MetricMeaningMarket SentimentATL (All-Time Low)Lowest price everFear, panic, or undervaluationATH (All-Time High)Highest price everGreed, hype, overvaluation

Both are historical extremes. ATHs attract FOMO (fear of missing out), while ATLs attract bargain hunters. But an ATL does not guarantee a bounce. Some coins stay low forever, especially if the project dies.

Read More: What is All-Time High (ATH) in Cryptocurrency?

How Market Events Create New ATLs

New all-time lows don’t happen in a vacuum. They are usually caused by one or more of the following:

Market crashes: The 2018 ICO collapse pushed many coins to ATLs.Regulatory crackdowns: Lawsuits or bans can cause panic selling.Security breaches or scams: The FTX collapse in 2022 sent its token to near-zero.

When multiple factors combine, even strong projects can hit new lows. Tracking these events helps you decide whether an ATL is a temporary dip or a permanent decline.

Two Real-World Examples: Success and FailureSuccess: Sui (SUI)

After launching in 2023, Sui faced criticism over its tokenomics and VC backing, causing heavy selling. It hit an ATL of $0.3648. But the Sui Foundation continued building – community grants, protocol upgrades, and developer incentives. Eventually, SUI rebounded, giving ATL buyers up to 1,300% returns.

Failure: Terra (LUNA) and UST

In May 2022, Terra’s algorithmic stablecoin UST lost its peg, triggering a death spiral. LUNA’s price collapsed from over $80 to near zero. Even after rebranding to Terra 2.0, the project never recovered. Buying the ATL here would have meant total loss.

Lesson: Not every ATL is a buying opportunity. Always ask why the coin hit that low.

How to Use ATL in Your Trading (Practical Tips)Combine ATL with Other Indicators

Never rely on ATL alone. Look at trading volume, on-chain activity, project updates, and market trend. A sudden volume spike near ATL can signal accumulation.

Use Stop-Loss Orders

If you decide to buy near ATL, place a stop-loss 2–5% below it. This protects you if the coin breaks down to a new ATL.

Position Sizing

Trading near all-time lows is high-risk. Allocate only a small portion of your portfolio to such trades. If the coin rebounds, you still profit. If it falls further, your loss is limited.

Watch for Multiple Touches

If a coin repeatedly bounces off its ATL, that level becomes stronger support. If it breaks through easily, stay away.

Common Mistakes When Trading ATLAssuming ATL is the final bottom – It might not be. New ATLs can form.Buying without research – A coin might be at ATL because the project is dead.No stop-loss – You could lose everything if the coin keeps falling.FOMO after a small bounce – Wait for confirmation, not just a green candle.Conclusion

ATL (all-time low) is a powerful concept in crypto. It tells you where a coin has bottomed before and helps you gauge fear in the market. Used correctly, it can lead to profitable entries during bear markets. Used blindly, it can wipe out your capital.

Always combine ATL analysis with fundamentals, volume, and risk management. And remember: a coin that hits a new ATL is not automatically a bargain — it might just be broken.

Ready to trade? WEEX offers zero fees, instant execution, and the security you need. Sign up on WEEX Now and Start Trading!

FAQQ1: What does ATL stand for in crypto?

ATL stands for “all-time low” – the lowest price a cryptocurrency has ever reached.

Q2: Is buying at ATL a good strategy?

It can be, but only if the project has strong fundamentals and the market drop is temporary. Always use a stop-loss.

Q3: How is ATL different from ATH?

ATH is the highest price ever; ATL is the lowest. They define a coin’s historical trading range.

Q4: Can a coin have multiple ATLs?

Yes. Each time it falls below its previous all-time low, that new price becomes the new ATL.

Q5: What’s an example of a successful ATL bounce?

Cardano (ADA) in March 2020 and Sui (SUI) in 2023 both rebounded strongly from their ATLs.

Join WEEX and Claim 30,000 USDT Bonus for New Users
Sign Up Now

Popular coins