

Market Cap
$747.64M
24h Volume
$6.79M
Circulating
1B NEXO
All-Time High
$4.07
Market Cap
$747.64M
Volume (24h)
$6.79M
Circulating Supply
1B NEXO
Max Supply
1B NEXO
1 NEXO = $0.75
| All-Time High | $4.07 (May 12, 2021) |
| All-Time Low | $0.045153 (September 13, 2018) |
Nexo is a centralized crypto lending and earn platform launched in 2018 by Antoni Trenchev (also a Bulgarian member of parliament), Kosta Kantchev, and Kalin Metodiev. The company is headquartered in London and Sofia and serves users across Europe, the UK, MENA, Asia, and parts of Latin America. The pitch is simple: deposit crypto, earn yield, or borrow fiat against it without selling.
NEXO is the platform’s native token, capped at 1,000,000,000 supply and originally issued as ERC-20 before being bridged to several other chains. Holding NEXO unlocks loyalty tiers, lower borrow rates, higher Earn APY, and richer cashback on the Nexo Card. For a non-custodial alternative on the lending side, see our Aave page.
NEXO trades on Bybit, Bitfinex, KuCoin, Gate, MEXC, and a long list of smaller venues. Notably, it is absent from Binance, Coinbase, and Kraken, the typical CeFi-token exclusion that hardened across 2023 and 2024 after FTX. Live data on this page comes from a multi-venue feed and refreshes every 60 seconds. The reference quote is volume-weighted across the most liquid order books. NEXO printed an all-time high near $4.75 in May 2021 during the first big CeFi cycle.
What actually moves NEXO on any given week:
The numbers in the price card above are live. For multi-year scenarios, see our NEXO price forecast.
The Nexo product stack splits into three pillars. Crypto Earn pays yield on deposited assets. Crypto Loans let users post crypto as collateral and draw a fiat or stablecoin credit line against it. The Nexo Card sits on top of both, turning idle balances into a payment instrument.
▼ +81.62% from ATH
| Trade → |
| Binance | NEXO/BTC | $0.000012 | Trade → |
| Binance | NEXO/USDT | $0.749 | Trade → |
The trade-off is custodial. Nexo holds the assets that back Earn and Loans, which is what allows the platform to issue an instant card and a credit line without forcing the user through a self-custody flow. That same design is what every CeFi failure of 2022 had in common.
NEXO is a utility token wired into nearly every product. The platform tracks the share of NEXO in a user’s portfolio and assigns one of four loyalty tiers: Base, Silver, Gold, Platinum. Higher tiers unlock better terms across the stack.
The honest read is that NEXO’s utility is the platform itself. Outside the Nexo ecosystem, the token has thin DeFi integration and limited on-chain demand, so the value case rests on Nexo’s book of business and on the loyalty mechanics that keep users from rotating out.
For several years, Nexo distributed a portion of company profits to NEXO holders as an annual dividend, paid in NEXO or USDT. That made NEXO one of the few "real-yield" tokens in CeFi, and the framework was a major part of the early bull case.
The trade-off is that any company-funded dividend depends on the company. If revenue compresses, the payout shrinks; if regulators force a change, the program changes with it. That is the structural difference between a NEXO dividend and an on-chain protocol fee split.
The hardest stretch of Nexo’s history is the US chapter. In December 2022, Nexo announced a voluntary wind-down of its US operations after a coordinated set of state actions, including New York and others, targeted the Earn Interest Product as an unregistered security. In January 2023, the company reached a $45 million settlement with the SEC and a parallel state set, again over Earn.
Nexo has expanded its EU and MENA footprint since 2023, secured EU MiCA-related licensing, and launched Nexo Prime as an institutional-facing product line. The investment case now leans on those non-US growth lanes rather than a return to the American retail market.
NEXO is more limited in venue selection than top DeFi tokens because the major US exchanges do not list it. The buy flow has to account for that.
For another collateral-backed asset that often turns up alongside Nexo Loans, see our
DAI page. The common mistake is to treat platform balances as wallet balances. They are not. Custody matters.
NEXO carries the specific risk profile of a CeFi platform token: counterparty exposure to Nexo itself, the absence of US-tier exchange listings, and ongoing regulatory pressure on the CeFi business model after the 2022 wave of failures.
This page is information, not financial advice. Talk to a licensed advisor before allocating real capital.
At the time of writing, NEXO (NEXO) trades at $0.74729, with a 24-hour trading volume of $6.79M and a total market capitalization of $747.64M. The asset is currently ranked #83 among all tracked cryptocurrencies by market cap.
Over the last 24 hours, the NEXO price has dropped +0.83%. On the seven-day chart, NEXO has climbed +0.59%, showing mixed signals across the short and medium term. Short-term price swings are often amplified by liquidity conditions, news flow, and derivatives positioning, so traders should confirm signals across multiple indicators before acting.
NEXO's all-time high of $4.07 was set on May 12, 2021. The current market price is +81.62% below that historical peak. Distance from the all-time high is a common reference point when evaluating long-term recoveries and identifying macro support or resistance levels.
Buying NEXO (NEXO) is straightforward once you know which exchange to use and which trading pair offers the best liquidity. The steps below describe the typical flow used by most investors today.
You can also use the built-in NEXO converter above to estimate exactly how much NEXO you would receive for a given amount in USD before placing an order.
Whether NEXO is a good investment depends on your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for volatility. Like all cryptocurrencies, NEXO carries significant market risk — prices can rise or fall sharply in a single day, and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.
This page provides data and analysis for educational purposes only. It is not financial advice. Always do your own research, diversify, and never invest more than you can afford to lose.