What is tokenomics?
Tokenomics is the study of a cryptocurrency's economic design. It covers how tokens are created, distributed, and used — and whether the incentive structure is sustainable long-term.
Key tokenomics components
Supply
- Total supply — maximum tokens that will ever exist
- Circulating supply — tokens currently in circulation
- Inflation rate — how quickly new tokens are created
Distribution
- Team allocation — what percentage do founders hold?
- Investor allocation — VC and early investor share
- Community/ecosystem — tokens for users and developers
- Vesting schedules — when locked tokens unlock
Utility
- What can you do with the token?
- Is there genuine demand, or just speculation?
Incentives
- Does the token reward productive behaviour?
- Are emissions sustainable, or will inflation destroy value?
Red flags in tokenomics
- Large team/investor allocation with short vesting
- No clear utility beyond speculation
- High inflation with no demand mechanism
- Anonymous team with large token allocation
Good tokenomics signals
- Fixed supply (no inflation)
- Long vesting for team tokens
- Clear utility tied to protocol usage
- Community-first distribution