Coin vs Token: What's the Difference in Crypto?

June 14, 2026
🏷️ tokens 🏷️ coins 🏷️ basics 🏷️ terminology

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.

CoinBlockchainPurpose
BTCBitcoinDigital gold, payments
ETHEthereumGas fees, smart contracts
SOLSolanaGas fees, staking
AVAXAvalancheGas fees, subnet security
DOTPolkadotParachain auctions, governance

Characteristics:

What Is a Token?

A token is a smart contract on an existing blockchain. It doesn’t have its own blockchain.

TokenBlockchainPurpose
USDCEthereum (and others)Stablecoin, payments
UNIEthereumUniswap governance
SHIBEthereumMeme coin
CHAINEthereumNode operator incentive
PYTHSolanaOracle data

Characteristics:

Why the Difference Matters

Security

Token risk: If the smart contract has a bug, your token can be stolen even though Ethereum itself is secure.

Development

Token risk: Low barrier to entry means more scams. Most tokens are rug pulls.

Value

Coins That Are Also Tokens

Some assets blur the line:

How to Tell If Something Is a Coin or Token

ClueLikely a CoinLikely 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)

Tokens (Higher Risk, Higher Potential)

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

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This content is for educational purposes only. Not financial advice. Do your own research before investing.