TL;DR
Binance has abruptly cut a wide swath of tokens from Binance Alpha, and the scale of the removal immediately rattled the market’s fringe listings segment. At 12:00 p.m. UTC on Thursday, the exchange removed 21 cryptocurrencies after determining that the affected assets no longer satisfied its listing standards. The sweep hit names including MIRROR, SHARDS, FST, DGC, COA, ULTI and TGT, with a second batch spanning AGON, BNB Card, AFT, PFVS, SGC, RDO, ELDE, MILK, TAT, BOT, SSS, SUBHUB, PLANCK and OOOO. For smaller traders, the message was unmistakable: Binance Alpha’s door can close quickly.
Binance Alpha will remove MIRROR, SHARDS, FST, DGC, COA, ULTI, TGT, AGON, BNB Card, AFT, PFVS, SGC, RDO, ELDE, MILK, TAT, BOT, SSS, SUBHUB, PLANCK, OOOO.
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https://t.co/PVKK2VpHnI pic.twitter.com/NbGlJk2Jxn
— Binance (@binance) March 12, 2026
The move matters because Binance Alpha is designed as a proving ground for newer and more speculative blockchain projects, not as the exchange’s full main trading venue. These assets had not been fully launched on Binance’s core trading platform, a distinction that helps explain both their visibility and their vulnerability. Binance’s rationale centered on risk, volatility and quality control, signaling that experimental access does not guarantee long-term residency. In effect, the exchange is reminding users that Alpha functions as a sandbox where early exposure comes with a shorter leash and a tolerance for abrupt reversals.

Still, the decision was not a total lockout, because Binance preserved an exit route for holders even while shutting these tokens out of the Alpha lineup. Users can continue selling the delisted assets through supported interfaces, including the Market tab in Binance Wallet and the Alpha asset section. That choice softens the operational blow for anyone still holding these names, even if it does nothing to repair confidence. It also creates a sharp contrast: Binance is withdrawing endorsement without trapping users entirely, a middle-ground response that limits platform exposure while avoiding an freeze on liquidation.
The broader takeaway is that Binance is tightening the boundaries around what qualifies for even experimental visibility on its ecosystem. Mass removals are not unprecedented, but cutting 21 tokens at once underscores how aggressively the exchange is policing the outer edge of its listings pipeline. For the projects involved, the blow is reputational as much as practical, since Alpha was one of the few places where they still had exposure. For the market, the episode is a reminder that access on platforms is conditional, revocable and tied to stricter standards than tokens can sustain.