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Binance Delisting Update Dec. 19, 2025: 8 Spot Trading Pairs Removed and 9 Tokens Dropped From Binance Alpha Featuring List
20 December 2025
6 mins read

Binance Delisting Update Dec. 19, 2025: 8 Spot Trading Pairs Removed and 9 Tokens Dropped From Binance Alpha Featuring List

Binance’s December 19, 2025 cleanup landed in two different places at two different times—its main Spot market and its early-stage “Binance Alpha” discovery layer—creating a tight 24-hour window that traders, bot users, and crypto treasury teams had to navigate carefully. On Binance’s own Delisting page, the key items tied to Dec. 19 were: (1) the removal of selected Spot trading pairs (announced earlier, effective Dec. 19) and (2) the removal of nine assets from the Binance Alpha featuring list (published on Dec. 19). Binance

While delistings are routine in crypto, the practical impact is rarely “routine” for anyone holding the affected assets—especially when liquidity fragments across fewer markets, automated strategies keep running by default, or corporate/DAO treasuries discover they’ve become unintentionally exposed to operational risk.

Below is what happened on 19.12.2025, what it means in plain English, and what market participants should pay attention to next.


What happened on Dec. 19: Two separate Binance actions, two separate clocks

1) Binance Spot: 8 trading pairs removed at 03:00 UTC

Binance said it conducts periodic reviews “to protect users and maintain a high quality trading market,” and may remove Spot pairs for reasons including poor liquidity and trading volume. Based on its latest review, Binance removed and ceased trading for the following Spot trading pairs at 2025-12-19 03:00 (UTC): Binance

  • AI/FDUSD
  • BICO/BTC
  • DOLO/BNB
  • MITO/BNB
  • MITO/FDUSD
  • MOVE/BTC
  • NEWT/BNB
  • OM/BTC

Important nuance: Binance explicitly noted that delisting a trading pair does not automatically remove the underlying tokens from Binance Spot; users may still be able to trade the same base/quote assets via other available pairs.

Binance also stated it would terminate Spot Trading Bots services for those pairs at the same time (03:00 UTC on Dec. 19) where applicable, and advised users to update and/or cancel bots to avoid potential losses.

Crypto media coverage leading into the deadline highlighted the same eight pairs and emphasized that this was a pair delisting, not necessarily a token removal.


2) Binance Alpha: 9 tokens removed from the featuring list at 07:00 UTC

Later the same day, Binance Wallet published a separate notice: following a review, nine tokens did not meet Binance Alpha’s standards and were removed from the Alpha featuring list at 2025-12-19 07:00 (UTC).

The nine tokens were:

  • BUZZ
  • DARK
  • FROG
  • GORK
  • MIRAI
  • PERRY
  • RFC
  • SNAI
  • TERMINUS

Crucially, Binance stated that selling these tokens on Binance Alpha would still be allowed after the removal and provided in-app paths for users to sell via Binance Wallet or Binance Alpha.

This Alpha update was widely echoed across crypto news aggregators and outlets on Dec. 19, which highlighted both the token list and the fact that selling remained available post-removal.


Binance Alpha vs Binance Spot: Why this distinction matters

The word “delist” gets used loosely in crypto headlines, but Dec. 19 is a reminder that where something is removed from matters.

Binance Spot pair removals are about market access

A Spot trading pair removal changes the route traders use to exchange assets on Binance. In practice, this can:

  • reduce direct liquidity in a preferred quote currency (BTC, BNB, or FDUSD here),
  • widen spreads and increase slippage in remaining pairs,
  • force market participants to reconfigure execution, hedging, or arbitrage paths.

Binance itself framed the action as part of routine quality control tied to liquidity/volume, and reminded users that the underlying assets may remain tradable through other pairs.

Binance Alpha is positioned as higher-risk, early-stage discovery

Binance’s Wallet notice also included a clearer description of Binance Alpha’s role: it “features emerging digital assets” that are not listed on the Binance Exchange, are generally expected to have low market capitalization, and the presence of an asset in Alpha does not imply it will be listed on Binance Exchange later. Binance

It also warned that Alpha assets may carry higher-than-normal risk and volatility, and that users may face slippage and blockchain fees.

Bottom line:

  • The Spot action affected how certain tokens could be traded (by removing specific pairs).
  • The Alpha action affected visibility and featuring for certain tokens—while still allowing selling after removal.

Why Binance delistings can move markets even when “tokens remain available”

Even when an exchange emphasizes “pair delisting, not token delisting,” the market often reacts quickly for one reason: liquidity is a feature, not a guarantee.

When a major venue removes a route like OM/BTC or BICO/BTC, it can push volume into fewer remaining markets—sometimes into stablecoin pairs, sometimes off-exchange—changing price discovery dynamics and making execution more expensive during volatility spikes. Binance’s own rationale for periodic reviews explicitly points at liquidity and trading volume as key considerations.

On the Alpha side, being removed from a “featuring list” can still matter because discoverability is a form of liquidity. If fewer users see a token surfaced by default, volumes can thin out and price moves can get sharper—especially for smaller-cap assets that already trade with wider spreads. Binance’s own Alpha disclaimer stresses that these assets can carry magnified volatility and risk. Binance


What traders needed to do before and after the Dec. 19 deadlines

This isn’t financial advice, but operationally, Dec. 19 required three basic checklists—one for Spot traders, one for bot users, and one for Alpha users.

If you traded the delisted Spot pairs

For the eight Spot pairs removed at 03:00 UTC, Binance’s guidance implied two practical steps:

  1. Identify alternative markets on Binance (if available) for the same base asset. Binance noted that tokens may still be tradable through other pairs.
  2. Review any open activity tied to those pairs (orders, scheduled trades, or strategies), because trading in those specific markets ceased at the cutoff time.

If you used Binance Spot Trading Bots

This part was the most time-sensitive: Binance stated it would terminate Spot Trading Bots services for the affected pairs at 03:00 UTC and urged users to update and/or cancel bots in advance to avoid potential losses.

For anyone running grid bots, DCA bots, or automation that assumed uninterrupted market access, the risk isn’t theoretical: bots can fail to execute intended logic once a market endpoint disappears, and “set-and-forget” becomes “set-and-regret” fast.

If you held the nine tokens affected on Binance Alpha

Binance’s Alpha note was more flexible than many traders expected: selling remained available after removal. Binance provided specific paths in the app for selling via Binance Wallet (Market tab → Search → Trade) or via Binance Alpha (Asset tab → Alpha → select token → Sell).

Still, Binance also reiterated that Alpha assets may involve higher risk and volatility, so users should manage risk and do their own research.


Treasury management angle: Why businesses should treat delistings as operational risk, not just price risk

One of the more practical takeaways from Dec. 19 is how easily delistings become treasury operations problems:

  • A startup that holds a small allocation of niche tokens can discover it no longer has the preferred liquidity path it relied on for conversions.
  • A DAO treasury may find that a token’s “easy exit” assumption was built on one or two pairs that can vanish in a periodic review.
  • Finance teams running recurring conversions (payroll, vendors, runway management) can be exposed if automation is built around a pair that gets removed.

A Dec. 19 explainer from OneSafe framed Binance Alpha removals as a reminder to maintain treasury discipline—highlighting diversification, staying informed, having a withdrawal plan, compliance readiness, and using treasury automation tools/APIs where appropriate.

You don’t have to agree with every vendor’s framing to accept the core operational point: venue risk is part of treasury risk in crypto.


The larger signal: Exchanges are tightening standards going into 2026

Binance’s own language around these actions is consistent: periodic reviews, liquidity/volume considerations, user protection, and standards enforcement—applied both to Spot markets and to Alpha featuring decisions.

For market participants, the message is straightforward:

  • If a token or pair depends on shallow liquidity, it’s more vulnerable to being deprioritized or removed.
  • If your strategy depends on a single venue or a single trading route, you’re exposed to disruption—even without any “black swan” event.

Dec. 19, 2025 wasn’t about a single dramatic crackdown; it was about plumbing—and in crypto, plumbing is price.


Key takeaways from 19.12.2025 (Dec. 19, 2025)

  • 03:00 UTC: Binance removed 8 Spot trading pairs (AI/FDUSD, BICO/BTC, DOLO/BNB, MITO/BNB, MITO/FDUSD, MOVE/BTC, NEWT/BNB, OM/BTC) and ended Spot Trading Bots support for those pairs.
  • 07:00 UTC: Binance Wallet removed 9 tokens from Binance Alpha’s featuring list (BUZZ, DARK, FROG, GORK, MIRAI, PERRY, RFC, SNAI, TERMINUS), while keeping selling available after removal.
  • Binance emphasized that Spot pair delistings do not necessarily remove tokens from Spot availability, and Alpha assets carry heightened volatility and risk.
  • Treasury teams should treat delistings as operational risk events and stress-test assumptions about liquidity, automation, and exit routes.

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