Coins and tokens are often used interchangeably, but they’re different.
Coin: Has its own blockchain (Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana) Token: Built on top of an existing blockchain (UNI on Ethereum, SHIB on Ethereum, USDC on Ethereum)
The difference matters for security, utility, and investment.
What Is a Coin?
A coin (also called a “native asset”) is the currency of its own blockchain.
| Coin | Blockchain | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| BTC | Bitcoin | Digital gold, payments |
| ETH | Ethereum | Gas fees, smart contracts |
| SOL | Solana | Gas fees, staking |
| AVAX | Avalanche | Gas fees, subnet security |
| DOT | Polkadot | Parachain auctions, governance |
Characteristics:
- Required to use its blockchain (pay gas fees, stake, participate in governance)
- Secured by the blockchain’s own validators/miners
- Usually has strong network effects
- Generally more established and less risky
What Is a Token?
A token is a smart contract on an existing blockchain. It doesn’t have its own blockchain.
| Token | Blockchain | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| USDC | Ethereum (and others) | Stablecoin, payments |
| UNI | Ethereum | Uniswap governance |
| SHIB | Ethereum | Meme coin |
| CHAIN | Ethereum | Node operator incentive |
| PYTH | Solana | Oracle data |
Characteristics:
- Built on an existing blockchain (usually Ethereum, Solana, BNB Chain)
- Created and managed by a smart contract
- Inherits the security of the underlying blockchain
- Can be created by anyone — no permission needed
Why the Difference Matters
Security
- Coins are secured by their own validators. Bitcoin’s security comes from its proof-of-work mining. Ethereum’s comes from its proof-of-stake validators.
- Tokens inherit the security of the underlying chain. An Ethereum token is secured by Ethereum’s validators.
Token risk: If the smart contract has a bug, your token can be stolen even though Ethereum itself is secure.
Development
- Coins require building an entire blockchain — developers, validators, infrastructure. Harder to create.
- Tokens can be deployed in minutes. Anyone can create a token on Ethereum with a few clicks and $50.
Token risk: Low barrier to entry means more scams. Most tokens are rug pulls.
Value
- Coins have intrinsic value on their blockchain (gas fees, staking, security).
- Tokens have value only if people agree they do (governance, utility, speculation).
Coins That Are Also Tokens
Some assets blur the line:
- BNB started as an ERC-20 token on Ethereum, then migrated to its own BNB Chain. It’s both a token (on Ethereum) and a coin (on BNB Chain).
- CRO started as an ERC-20 token, then moved to Crypto.org Chain.
- MATIC is an ERC-20 token that powers the Polygon network (and will become POL, the native coin of Polygon 2.0).
How to Tell If Something Is a Coin or Token
| Clue | Likely a Coin | Likely a Token |
|---|---|---|
| Has its own block explorer | ✅ | ❌ |
| Listed with its own blockchain on CoinGecko | ✅ | ❌ |
| Needs “gas” to transact | ✅ | ❌ |
| Can be created by any developer | ❌ | ✅ |
| Ticker appears on multiple chains | ❌ | ✅ |
| Smart contract address exists | ❌ | ✅ |
Which Is Better to Invest In?
Coins (Generally Safer)
- Bitcoin, Ethereum, Solana have proven track records
- They power real ecosystems
- They’re harder to replace
Tokens (Higher Risk, Higher Potential)
- Can 100x if the project succeeds
- Most go to zero
- Rug pull risk is real
General rule: 70-80% of your portfolio in coins (BTC, ETH, SOL). 20-30% maximum in tokens — and only well-established ones (UNI, AAVE, LINK).
Common Confusions
“Is Ethereum a coin or token?” Ethereum (ETH) is a coin. It has its own blockchain. But many people call it a “token” when talking about ERC-20 tokens (which are built on Ethereum).
“Is USDC a coin?” No, USDC is a token. It exists on multiple blockchains (Ethereum, Solana, Arbitrum, etc.) but doesn’t have its own blockchain.
“Can a token become a coin?” Yes. Binance Coin (BNB) started as an Ethereum token and migrated to its own chain. This is called a “token migration” or “mainnet launch.”
Verdict
Coins have their own blockchains. Tokens are built on existing blockchains.
For beginners: focus on coins (BTC, ETH, SOL) first. Add established tokens (USDC, UNI, AAVE) as you learn. Avoid randomly created tokens — most are scams.
The distinction matters for security (tokens have more smart contract risk), investment (coins are generally safer), and understanding how crypto works at a fundamental level.
Related: What Is Cryptocurrency? | Best Cryptocurrencies for Beginners | What Is a Smart Contract? | How to Research a Crypto Project