CEX ยท binance

Binance

BMC 24h Volume $2,385,965,292 14 supported markets
Supported Coins14
Supported Markets14
OK Sources14
Error Sources0
Last Sync38s ago
Statusok

Overview

Binance is a centralized exchange venue whose official resources emphasize Binance identity, official resources, product context, market access, liquidity, and user verification, with listed market context for Binancecoin, Cardano, Chainlink, Ethereum, Pancakeswap Token, Pax Gold, Polygon Ecosystem Token, and Rocket Pool.

Coverage

Exchange ID
binance
Type
CEX
Source health
ok

Markets

Binance market sources

Base Asset Type Pair BMC ID Quote Price Price USD 24h Volume Last Updated Status Market
Usd CoinUSDC CEX USDC/USDT 1116 USDT 1.00058 $1.00058 $1,812,980,532 33m ago ok Open
EthereumETH CEX ETH/USDT 1069 USDT 1,748.41 $1,748 $305,004,351 40s ago ok Open
SolanaSOL CEX SOL/USDT 1105 USDT 78.19 $78.19 $118,116,148 33m ago ok Open
BinancecoinBNB CEX BNB/USDT 1052 USDT 572.41 $572.41 $49,462,271 33m ago ok Open
TronTRX CEX TRX/USDT 1114 USDT 0.3321 $0.3321 $30,540,780 38s ago ok Open
CardanoADA CEX ADA/USDT 1056 USDT 0.1669 $0.1669 $19,814,752 33m ago ok Open
UniswapUNI CEX UNI/USDT 1115 USDT 3.404 $3.404 $18,633,582 33m ago ok Open
Pax GoldPAXG CEX PAXG/USDT 1100 USDT 4,117.7 $4,118 $8,535,995 33m ago ok Open
ChainlinkLINK CEX LINK/USDT 1058 USDT 7.77 $7.77 $8,146,149 39s ago ok Open
The Open NetworkTON CEX TON/USDT 1112 USDT 1.6 $1.60 $7,717,352 39s ago ok Open
Wrapped BitcoinWBTC CEX WBTC/USDT 1120 USDT 63,170.32 $63,170 $3,122,718 40s ago ok Open
Polygon Ecosystem TokenPOL CEX POL/USDT 1101 USDT 0.07626 $0.07626 $2,368,183 33m ago ok Open
Pancakeswap TokenCAKE CEX CAKE/USDT 1097 USDT 1.382 $1.382 $1,202,339 33m ago ok Open
Rocket PoolRPL CEX RPL/USDT 1103 USDT 1.72 $1.72 $320,140 33m ago ok Open

Description

What Is Binance?

Binance is a centralized exchange venue. The useful way to read an exchange page is to begin with the venue model, then look at official resources, listed assets, visible pairs, quote assets, liquidity context, and recent market activity.

The recorded official resources for Binance are still the primary reference point, with available links covering binance.com website. Those resources help readers understand how the venue presents its products, access path, documentation, user experience, and market structure.

Binance currently appears with market context for Binancecoin, Cardano, Chainlink, Ethereum, Pancakeswap Token, Pax Gold, Polygon Ecosystem Token, and Rocket Pool. The connected symbols include ETH, and the visible pairs include ADA/USDT, BNB/USDT, CAKE/USDT, ETH/USDT, LINK/USDT, PAXG/USDT, POL/USDT, and RPL/USDT. These details turn the exchange page into a venue-specific research surface rather than a generic exchange summary.

Official Source Themes

The official-source themes for Binance include Binance identity, official resources, product context, market access, liquidity, and user verification. Readers should use those themes to understand the venue's own positioning before interpreting pair-level price or volume data.

A venue can be well known overall while a specific pair remains thin, inactive, or difficult to use. For Binance, the practical question is not only what the venue is, but how each visible market behaves.

Why Venue Model Matters

Binance should be read through its venue model. CEX and DEX markets can both show prices, but they expose different execution paths, custody assumptions, fee structures, and user responsibilities.

Venue Model And User Access

The access model for Binance is best reviewed through account-based access, deposits, withdrawals, order books or internal matching, account security, fees, and regional availability. These details affect how users move funds, place trades, read liquidity, and manage operational risk.

For a CEX, readers usually need to think about accounts, authentication, deposit networks, withdrawal rules, order books, and support processes. For a DEX, readers usually need to think about wallets, approvals, routers, pools, slippage, and network fees. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Binance should therefore be interpreted as more than a logo beside a pair. The venue model shapes how price discovery, liquidity, execution, and user responsibility work in practice.

Official resources are especially important for venue access. They can explain supported regions, product boundaries, API availability, fee schedules, protocol versions, or wallet connection flows in a way that copied market summaries cannot. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Official Resources, Products And Documentation

Binance has recorded official-resource coverage through binance.com website. These resources are the best starting point for checking whether a market page, API page, documentation page, or social channel is current.

Official documentation can clarify product scope. It may describe spot markets, swaps, liquidity pools, bridge routes, derivatives, API access, account security, supported networks, or protocol mechanics depending on the type of venue. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

For Binance, readers should compare official resources with the visible pairs. If the venue presents a specific product line or protocol version, the market rows should be interpreted through that product context.

A strong exchange review does not rely only on reputation. It checks the current official site, the exact market, the product type, and the current user path before drawing conclusions about the venue. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Markets, Pairs And Quote Assets

Binance currently appears with ADA/USDT, BNB/USDT, CAKE/USDT, ETH/USDT, LINK/USDT, PAXG/USDT, POL/USDT, and RPL/USDT. The recorded quote assets include USDT. These fields help readers understand what is actually being priced and which asset is used as the comparison unit.

Pair-level context matters because the same venue can host very different markets. One pair may be liquid, another may be thin, and another may depend on a specific route, network, or quote asset. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

The assets connected with Binance include Binancecoin, Cardano, Chainlink, Ethereum, Pancakeswap Token, Pax Gold, Polygon Ecosystem Token, and Rocket Pool. That list should be read as market coverage for visible rows, not as a claim about every product or asset the venue may support elsewhere.

For Binance, quote assets are part of the risk and interpretation. A USDT pair, ETH pair, BTC pair, BNB pair, SOL pair, or stablecoin pair can each create a different comparison frame and liquidity profile.

Pair-Level Reading

The cleanest way to read Binance market data is pair by pair. Start with the base asset, quote asset, venue type, price, volume, status, and update time before making any broader comparison.

Liquidity, Volume And Execution Context

Liquidity describes how easily a market may absorb trading activity without large price movement. Volume describes observed activity over a period. For Binance, both ideas are useful only when connected to a specific pair and quote asset.

A CEX market may require checking order-book depth, spreads, deposit and withdrawal support, market rules, and account restrictions. A DEX market may require checking pool reserves, route quality, slippage, network fees, approvals, and contract risk. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Volume should not be treated as the whole story. A market can show activity while still having high spreads, concentrated liquidity, delayed updates, limited wallet routes, or operational constraints that matter to users. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

For Binance, execution context is part of the venue's meaning. The same price displayed on two venues can imply different trade sizes, fees, settlement assumptions, and operational steps.

Reading Updates And Official Signals

Binance should be reviewed with attention to dates and source freshness. Official pages, docs, blogs, and market rows can update at different speeds, so a recent market row does not automatically mean every official resource is current.

The official-source themes around Binance point to Binance identity, official resources, product context, market access, liquidity, and user verification. Readers can use those themes as a checklist when opening the venue's own resources and comparing them with listed markets.

If a venue has multiple protocol versions, apps, regions, or product areas, readers should avoid mixing them together. A V2 pool, V3 pool, order-book market, and app front end may share a brand but behave differently. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

A useful review of Binance keeps official signals and market signals separate. Official materials explain what the venue presents; market rows show what is currently visible for specific assets and pairs.

Security, Operations And User Responsibility

Security and operations are part of any serious review of Binance. A reader should understand how access works, what official channels exist, which product area is being used, and which steps are required before interacting with a market.

For account-based venues, operational checks can include login security, withdrawal settings, supported networks, account restrictions, support paths, and fee pages. For wallet-based venues, checks can include contract addresses, approvals, pool routes, slippage, and network costs. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Binance should also be read with attention to impersonation risk. Exchange and protocol brands are often copied through fake domains, unofficial social accounts, or misleading market links, so official resources should be opened directly and checked carefully.

User responsibility differs by venue model. A centralized venue may handle matching and balances inside an account system, while a decentralized venue may leave transaction signing, approvals, network selection, and gas management to the wallet user. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

What To Recheck Later

For Binance, useful follow-up checks include official domain changes, documentation updates, pair availability, liquidity changes, fee updates, supported networks, API changes, and any new notices published by the venue.

Interpreting Venue Claims And Market Data

Official venue claims and market data should answer different questions for Binance. Official claims explain what the venue says it offers, while market rows show a narrower view of specific assets, quote currencies, prices, volumes, and update times.

Readers should be careful when broad venue branding and pair-level data appear to tell different stories. A venue can promote a wide product set while a particular pair has limited liquidity, limited route quality, or a narrow quote-asset context. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

For Binance, the strongest interpretation comes from reading official-resource themes, venue model, access path, pair details, quote assets, and source freshness together. If one layer is unclear, that uncertainty should remain visible in the review.

This approach also helps readers avoid treating a single metric as a complete judgment. Volume, price, official documentation, fee pages, interface design, and source freshness each provide partial context for the venue. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Comparing Venue Data Over Time

A useful review of Binance should not happen only once. Venue pages, market pairs, API documentation, liquidity conditions, product coverage, and user access rules can change, so readers should periodically recheck the same details.

For Binance, time-based comparison can reveal whether a pair remains visible, whether quote assets change, whether official documentation moves, whether the venue adds or removes product areas, and whether market activity remains consistent.

This is especially important when a venue supports both established assets and smaller assets. The venue may remain active overall while a specific pair becomes less liquid, less fresh, or harder to use in practice. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Readers should keep old assumptions separate from current evidence. A previous market listing, an old blog post, or an earlier product page can be useful history, but current official resources and fresh pair data matter more for present-day interpretation. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Practical Follow-Up

For Binance, practical follow-up means reopening the official site, checking whether the same pairs still appear, reviewing any new venue notices, and comparing current price and volume context with the earlier market view.

Risks And Practical Considerations

Binance can involve venue risk, liquidity risk, market risk, operational risk, technical risk, and information-quality risk. These risks apply differently depending on whether the venue is centralized, decentralized, or protocol-version-specific.

This description is educational background about Binance, its official resources, venue model, and visible market structure. It is not investment advice, trading advice, a recommendation, an offer, or an instruction to use the venue or any listed asset.

For Binance, readers should confirm the official domain, the exact pair, the quote asset, the product type, the update time, and the access path. These checks reduce mistakes caused by copied links, inactive markets, unsupported regions, old routes, or similarly named assets.

CEX users should consider account security, custody assumptions, deposit and withdrawal networks, regional rules, fees, downtime, order-book depth, and support quality. DEX users should consider wallet safety, approvals, smart contracts, route quality, slippage, and network fees. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

A market row does not guarantee execution quality. Before making any personal decision, readers should review current venue terms, official documentation, live liquidity, transaction costs, and any legal, tax, or operational requirements that apply to them. For Binance, this point should be weighed alongside its official resources, visible market rows, quote assets, and current source freshness.

Binance is most useful to study when official resources and market rows are read together. The official resources explain the venue's intended product context, while the pair data helps readers understand the specific market being viewed.