Tokenomics is the economic design of your token. It encompasses everything from total supply and distribution to utility and value flows. Good tokenomics create sustainable value and align incentives between creators, holders, and users.
Poor tokenomics can doom even great projects. Too much supply, unfair distribution, or lack of utility can prevent your token from gaining traction. This guide explains how to design tokenomics that support long-term success.
Plan your tokenomics before you create your token. Decisions about supply and distribution are permanent. Combine this with our distribution guide and cost planning for complete token economics.
What is Tokenomics?
Tokenomics combines "token" and "economics" - it's the economic model that governs your token. It includes all factors that affect a token's value and utility, from supply mechanics to distribution and use cases.
Key components of tokenomics include:
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Supply: Total number of tokens, inflation/deflation mechanics, and supply schedule
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Distribution: How tokens are allocated across team, community, liquidity, and reserves
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Utility: What the token is used for, use cases, and value proposition
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Economic Flows: How tokens flow through the ecosystem, rewards, and incentives
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Vesting: How locked tokens are released over time
Designing Token Supply
Total supply is one of the most important tokenomics decisions. It affects price, scarcity, and usability. There's no perfect number, but there are best practices.
Factors to Consider
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Target Price: If you want a $1 token and $1M market cap, you need 1M tokens. If you want $0.001, you need 1B tokens.
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Use Case: Micro-transactions need large supply. Store of value tokens need smaller supply.
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Market Cap Goals: Consider your target market cap and work backwards to supply.
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Decimals: More decimals allow smaller supply with same precision. 6 decimals is common.
Common Supply Ranges
Small Supply
1M - 10M tokens
Creates scarcity, higher price per token
Medium Supply
10M - 100M tokens
Balanced approach, most common
Large Supply
100M - 1B+ tokens
Enables micro-transactions, lower price
Token Distribution Design
How you distribute tokens affects everything - from initial price to long-term sustainability. Fair distribution builds trust, while unfair distribution can kill projects.
See our comprehensive distribution guide for detailed strategies. Here's a summary of key considerations:
Allocation Categories
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Public Launch (30-50%): Tokens available at launch for community
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Team & Advisors (10-20%): With vesting schedules to align incentives
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Development & Treasury (20-30%): For future development and partnerships
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Community Rewards (10-15%): For airdrops, contests, and incentives
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Liquidity (5-10%): Reserved for DEX liquidity pools
Designing Token Utility
Utility gives your token value beyond speculation. Without utility, tokens rely solely on hype, which is unsustainable. Good utility creates ongoing demand.
Types of Utility
Governance
Tokens grant voting rights on project decisions
Payment
Used to pay for services or products
Rewards
Earned through participation or staking
Access
Required to access features or content
Creating Sustainable Demand
Design utility that creates ongoing demand. One-time use cases don't sustain value. Look for recurring use cases that create continuous token flow.
Economic Models and Incentives
How tokens flow through your ecosystem affects value. Design economic flows that reward desired behaviors and create sustainable value.
Incentive Design
Design incentives that align with your goals:
- Long-term holding: Staking rewards, reduced fees for holders
- Community participation: Rewards for contributions, referrals
- Liquidity provision: Rewards for providing liquidity
- Usage: Discounts or benefits for using the token
Token Flows
Design how tokens enter and exit your ecosystem. Consider:
- How tokens are distributed (fair launch, presale, airdrop)
- How tokens are earned (staking, rewards, participation)
- How tokens are spent (payments, fees, access)
- How tokens are removed (burning, locking, fees)
Vesting Schedules
Vesting controls how locked tokens are released over time. This prevents immediate dumps and aligns long-term incentives.
Common Vesting Models
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Linear Vesting: Equal amounts released regularly (e.g., 10% monthly for 10 months)
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Cliff Vesting: Nothing released until a date, then regular releases
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Accelerated Vesting: Faster releases early, slower later
Team tokens should always be vested. Common schedules are 12-48 months with monthly or quarterly releases. This shows commitment and prevents immediate dumps.
Tokenomics Best Practices
Be Transparent
Publish your tokenomics publicly. Explain your reasoning. Transparency builds trust and helps holders understand your token's economics.
Fair Distribution
Avoid keeping too much for yourself. Fair distribution builds trust and decentralization. See our distribution guide for strategies.
Create Real Utility
Don't rely solely on speculation. Design utility that creates ongoing demand. Utility sustains value long-term.
Vest Team Tokens
Always vest team allocations. This aligns incentives and prevents immediate dumps that hurt price and trust.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are tokenomics for Solana tokens?
Tokenomics refers to the economic design of your token, including total supply, distribution, utility, incentives, and economic flows. Good tokenomics create sustainable value and align incentives between creators, holders, and users. It includes decisions about supply, allocation, vesting, and use cases. Plan tokenomics before creating your token as many decisions are permanent.
How do I design good tokenomics?
Design good tokenomics by: defining clear utility and use cases, setting appropriate total supply, allocating tokens fairly across stakeholders, implementing vesting schedules, creating incentives for long-term holding, ensuring adequate liquidity, and maintaining transparency. Study successful projects and adapt models that fit your goals. See our distribution guide for detailed strategies.
What is a good token supply for a Solana token?
There's no one-size-fits-all answer. Supply depends on your use case, target price, and distribution goals. Common ranges are 1 million to 1 billion tokens. Smaller supplies create scarcity, larger supplies allow micro-transactions. Consider your utility, target market cap, and decimal precision when deciding. Most tokens use 10M-100M supply as a balanced approach.
Should I have token inflation or deflation?
For SPL tokens, you typically set a fixed supply. Most tokens don't have automatic inflation or deflation. However, you can implement token burning (deflation) through fees or buybacks, or create new tokens through rewards (if you keep mint authority). Fixed supply is most common and builds trust through predictability.
Plan Your Tokenomics
Design sustainable tokenomics, then create your Solana token.
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