Sun Token (SUN) is the governance and yield-farming token of SunSwap, the largest decentralized exchange on the TRON blockchain. It launched in September 2020 as a fair-launch farming token in the same wave as SushiSwap and the early BNB Chain DEXs, and has since matured into the central incentive layer for TRON DeFi. For the underlying chain context, see our TRON market page.
SUN is a TRC-20 token. Holders use it to vote on governance proposals, stake for protocol revenue, and farm liquidity rewards on SunSwap pools. The original SUN contract was migrated and rebranded in early 2022 when the project absorbed JustSwap (TRON's old AMM), unifying SUN, the JST-era farming flows, and SunSwap into a single product. The token sits at the center of the broader Justin Sun ecosystem, alongside TRX, JST, USDD, and BTT, and most of the long-tail TRON DeFi activity routes through SUN-incentivized pools.
SUN price today
SUN trades on every major spot venue and on SunSwap itself. The deepest pairs are SUN/USDT, SUN/TRX, and SUN/USDD. 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. SUN posted its all-time high in early 2021 during the first DeFi farming cycle and has spent most cycles since then trading well below that mark, with price action tracking TRON throughput more than anything SunSwap-specific.
What actually moves SUN on any given week:
TRON network activity. SunSwap is the default DEX for TRON users, so daily transactions, USDT-TRC20 transfer volume, and stablecoin flows on TRON feed almost directly into SUN swap volume and farming demand.
USDD peg health. SunSwap pools are a major venue for USDD liquidity. When the algorithmic stablecoin holds peg cleanly, SUN benefits from steady fee revenue; peg wobbles drag the token with them.
Farming emissions and burns. SUN has both ongoing farming emissions and a periodic buyback-and-burn financed by protocol fees. Net issuance is the variable traders watch, not gross emissions.
Staking lock-up share. The percentage of SUN staked for governance and revenue share pulls supply out of the float. Big stake-up weeks tighten liquidity; big unstake weeks loosen it.
TRX correlation and Justin Sun headlines. SUN behaves like a leveraged TRX trade. Most rallies and drawdowns track TRX itself and the broader news cycle around the founder rather than anything purely DeFi-related.
The numbers in the price card above are live. For multi-year scenarios, see our .
FAQ
What is Sun Token used for?
Sun Token (SUN) is the governance and yield-farming token of SunSwap, the largest decentralized exchange on TRON. Holders use SUN to vote on governance proposals, stake for protocol revenue share, and farm liquidity rewards on SunSwap pools. SUN is a TRC-20 token and sits at the center of TRON DeFi alongside TRX, JST, and the USDD stablecoin. Most TRON-based stablecoin and altcoin trading volume routes through SUN-incentivized pools.
Sun Token vs PancakeSwap (CAKE): which is better?
PancakeSwap (CAKE) is the dominant DEX token on BNB Chain, with multi-chain deployments, perpetuals, a lottery, and a launchpad. Sun Token (SUN) is the dominant DEX token on TRON, with a much heavier focus on stablecoin pools and tighter integration into a single founder-led ecosystem (TRX, JST, USDD). CAKE has broader product surface area; SUN has cheaper transactions and direct exposure to TRON's very large USDT-TRC20 volume. If you live on BNB Chain, CAKE is usually the answer; if you live on TRON, SUN is.
How does SUN staking work?
SUN staking is the simplest way to earn from the token. You stake SUN through the SunSwap interface and receive a share of protocol fee revenue plus additional SUN emissions, depending on the pool you pick. Yields update in real time and you can unstake whenever, with a short cooldown on some pools. Stakers also get voting power on governance proposals and boosted returns on selected liquidity pools. Plain staking has no impermanent loss risk; liquidity-pair farming pays more but exposes you to price divergence in the pool.
What is the difference between SUN, JST, and USDD?
They are three separate tokens in the same Justin Sun TRON ecosystem. SUN is the governance and yield-farming token of SunSwap, the main DEX on TRON. JST is the governance token of JustLend, the main lending protocol on TRON. USDD is the algorithmic stablecoin pegged to one US dollar that ties the system together. All three are TRC-20 tokens and their economics are correlated, but they have different products, different cash flows, and different risk profiles.
Is SUN a good investment?
SUN is a high-beta bet on TRON activity, USDT-TRC20 volume, and the continued health of the broader Justin Sun ecosystem. It has held the top DEX spot on TRON for years and benefits from one of the largest stablecoin settlement layers in crypto, but it carries concentrated chain risk, founder key-person risk, and exposure to USDD peg health. Treat it as a high-risk DeFi infrastructure position, size it accordingly, and assume volatility in line with other large-cap altcoins.
What chains does SunSwap run on?
SunSwap is a TRON-native protocol, and the vast majority of SUN volume happens on TRON. There are bridges that move SUN to BNB Chain and Ethereum for cross-chain swaps, but the AMM, the staking products, and the governance all live on TRON itself. SUN is fundamentally a TRC-20 token, and its economics are tied to TRON network activity rather than to any other chain.
Where can I buy SUN?
SUN trades on Binance, OKX, HTX, Bybit, KuCoin, Gate.io, Poloniex, and most other major spot exchanges, with deep liquidity in SUN/USDT and SUN/TRX. You can also buy SUN directly on the SunSwap interface itself if you already hold TRX or USDT-TRC20 in a self-custody TRON wallet such as TronLink. After the purchase, move long-term holdings to a hardware wallet (Ledger supports TRON), and consider staking part of the position if you plan to hold for years.
How is SUN burned?
SUN has a periodic buyback-and-burn mechanism. A portion of SunSwap protocol fees from swaps and stable-pool trading is used to buy SUN on the open market, and the bought tokens are sent to a burn address and removed from supply forever. The team publishes burn announcements on the official sun.io and SunSwap channels. The burns combined with reduced farming emissions push net SUN issuance close to zero in quarters with strong TRON volume.
At its simplest, SunSwap is an automated market maker on TRON. Liquidity providers deposit pairs of TRC-20 tokens into pools and earn a share of the swap fees. Traders swap directly from a TRON wallet, with no order book and no account. The mechanics will feel familiar to anyone who has used Uniswap or PancakeSwap; SunSwap is in the same AMM lineage, with design choices borrowed from earlier Uniswap versions and tuned for TRON's low fees and fast block times.
v1 AMM (legacy JustSwap). The original constant-product pools (x*y=k) inherited from JustSwap when SunSwap absorbed it in 2022. Still hosts long-tail TRC-20 liquidity.
v2 pools. The current main version, with refined fee math and better routing. SUN farming rewards are concentrated here.
Stable pools. Curve-style pools optimized for tight pegs, which is where most of the USDT, USDC, and USDD volume on TRON actually clears. These pools generate the bulk of protocol fees.
Aggregated routing. The SunSwap interface routes swaps across v1, v2, and stable pools to get the best price, similar to what 1inch does on EVM chains.
Side products. A launchpad for new TRON projects, a bridge to BNB Chain and Ethereum, and the broader sun.io portal that ties SUN, JST, and USDD together. Most of these are small in revenue terms but help with retention.
Compared with Uniswap and PancakeSwap, SunSwap charges very low gas thanks to TRON's fee model, runs on a smaller but high-throughput chain, and leans heavily on stablecoin volume. SunSwap is the cheapest of the three to use, and SUN has more obvious cash flows tied to USDT-TRC20 turnover than CAKE or UNI have to their respective chains.
SUN tokenomics: emissions, burns, and the migration
SUN started inflationary, like every other 2020-era farming token. The current setup is the result of two things: the 2022 JustSwap migration that consolidated supply, and a series of governance votes that have tightened emissions since.
Original design (2020). Fair-launch farming token, no premine, no team allocation, with a hard cap of 19,900,730 SUN at launch. Popular with farmers, dilutive for long-term holders.
Migration (early 2022). The original SUN contract was swapped 1:1000 for new SUN as part of the SunSwap relaunch. The migration absorbed JustSwap, restructured supply, and lifted the maximum supply to support the unified ecosystem.
Emission cuts (ongoing). Governance has voted through multiple farming-reward reductions since the migration. Emissions still exist but are far below 2020-2021 levels.
Buyback and burn (ongoing). A portion of SunSwap protocol fees finances periodic SUN buybacks. Bought SUN is sent to a burn address and removed from supply forever.
The combination matters. Lower emissions plus periodic burns mean net SUN issuance has trended toward zero, especially in quarters with strong stablecoin volume on TRON. That is not the same thing as price going up, but it does change the floor of the asset compared with the 2020 version of the token.
SUN staking and governance
SUN staking is the simplest way to earn from the token without providing liquidity. You stake SUN through the SunSwap interface and receive a share of protocol revenue plus additional SUN emissions, depending on the pool you pick. Yields update in real time and you can unstake whenever, although a short cooldown applies on some pools.
Revenue share. Stakers earn a portion of the swap fees collected by SunSwap pools, which gives the token a direct claim on the venue rather than just governance.
Boosted farming. Stakers get higher returns on selected liquidity pools, similar to the veCAKE boost mechanic on PancakeSwap.
Voting power. Staked SUN votes on governance proposals: emission schedules, new pool incentives, fee changes, and treasury spending.
JST integration. The SUN, JST, and USDD ecosystem is tightly linked. Some staking products on sun.io distribute rewards in JST or USDD instead of pure SUN, which is useful if you want exposure to TRON DeFi without doubling down on a single token.
If you only hold SUN casually, plain staking is the easier entry. If you treat SUN as a long-term position on TRON DeFi, the boosted farming pools usually pay better but carry impermanent loss risk on the underlying pair.
TRON ecosystem and the Justin Sun connection
SUN is impossible to evaluate without the TRON context. SunSwap sits at the center of the chain's DeFi stack, and the chain itself is one of the largest stablecoin settlement layers in the world, with USDT-TRC20 routinely accounting for 30-40% of all USDT in circulation.
Stablecoin gravity. TRON moves more USDT in dollar terms than Ethereum on most days. SunSwap captures a meaningful share of that flow through its stable pools, which is the single biggest reason SUN has any real revenue at all.
Justin Sun. The founder of TRON is the public face of the ecosystem and an active voice on Twitter. That is good for marketing and bad for headline risk; SUN tends to react to anything Justin Sun says or does, even when it is unrelated to SunSwap.
JST and USDD. JustLend (JST) and the USDD stablecoin are the other two pillars of TRON DeFi. SunSwap is where their tokens trade and where their stablecoin pools live, so SUN economics are partially correlated with the health of those products.
BitTorrent and the broader portfolio. Justin Sun also controls or influences BTT, HTX, Poloniex, and a number of other crypto properties. SUN benefits from cross-promotion across that portfolio but inherits the reputational risk too.
The honest read is that SUN is a leveraged play on TRON itself. If TRON keeps its stablecoin share, SUN has a real fee-earning business. If TRON loses share to Solana, BNB Chain, or L2s for stablecoin transfers, SUN has a much harder story to tell.
How to buy and stake Sun Token (SUN)
SUN is widely listed on centralized exchanges and is also one of the most liquid tokens on SunSwap itself. The choice is mostly about how you want to hold it and whether you plan to stake. A typical buy-and-stake flow looks like this:
Pick a venue. Centralized exchanges list SUN against USDT and TRX with deep books, and most of them support TRC-20 deposits and withdrawals natively. Our exchange ratings compare the leading platforms on fees, security audits, and supported networks.
Or buy SUN on SunSwap itself. If you already hold TRX or USDT-TRC20 in a self-custody wallet (TronLink is the standard), you can swap directly on the SunSwap interface. Gas is cheap on TRON, often a fraction of a cent per swap, sometimes zero if you have enough bandwidth and energy staked.
Move SUN to a self-custody wallet. SUN is a TRC-20 token. TronLink is the default browser wallet; Ledger supports TRON and TRC-20 tokens for hardware-level custody. Send a small test transfer the first time you withdraw to a new address.
Decide between staking and farming. Plain SUN staking earns revenue share and emissions with no impermanent loss exposure. Farming pairs (SUN/TRX, SUN/USDT, etc.) pay more but expose you to price divergence between the two assets in the pool.
Track the position. Keep an eye on the periodic burn announcements, the staking ratio, and any governance votes you want to weigh in on. Most of what changes the long-run value of SUN shows up in those numbers before it shows up in the price.
If you plan to vote on emissions or earn the full revenue share, the stake has to be in a wallet you control. SUN sitting on a centralized exchange does not vote on your behalf and does not earn the protocol fee distribution.
Risks of holding Sun Token
SUN has more chain-specific and founder-specific risk than most large-cap DEX tokens, and most coverage of it skips that part. The risks worth taking seriously cluster in a few places.
TRON dependency. Almost all SUN volume sits on TRON. If TRON loses its stablecoin share, if regulators target USDT-TRC20 specifically, or if the chain itself loses ground to Solana and EVM L2s for stablecoin transfers, SUN feels it before any other large-cap DEX token does.
Justin Sun key-person risk. The founder is the public face of TRON, SunSwap, and a half-dozen other crypto businesses. Anything that affects his standing (legal action, exchange enforcement, public controversies) tends to spill straight into SUN price action regardless of SunSwap fundamentals.
USDD peg risk. USDD is an algorithmic stablecoin that has held peg most of the time but is structurally riskier than USDT or USDC. A serious USDD depeg would damage SunSwap stable pools, drain liquidity, and pressure SUN directly.
SUN inflation tail. Emissions are far lower than they were in 2020-2021, and burns offset some new issuance, but SUN is not yet structurally deflationary. Future governance votes can raise emissions again to fund new pools or chains.
DEX competition. Uniswap and SushiSwap have token bridges to TRON, and Solana DEXs are pulling general retail volume away from TRON. SunSwap has to defend its share by keeping fees low and keeping USDD pools liquid.
Smart-contract risk. SunSwap has been audited, but the surface area is large: AMM v1, v2, stable pools, staking, the bridge, and the launchpad. A bug in any one product can drain that pool even if the AMM core is sound. The absorbed JustSwap codebase adds legacy complexity.
Regulatory exposure. SUN, TRX, USDD, and JST all share the same ecosystem. Enforcement actions against any one of them, or against TRON itself, tend to spill across the whole portfolio.
Custody. SUN on an exchange depends on the exchange’s solvency. Long-term holdings, especially staked SUN positions, belong on a hardware wallet under your own keys via TronLink or Ledger.
This page is information, not financial advice. Talk to a licensed advisor before allocating real capital.
Sun Token price analysis
At the time of writing, Sun Token (SUN) trades at $0.019998, with a 24-hour trading volume of $55.85M and a total market capitalization of $384.49M. The asset is currently ranked #124 among all tracked cryptocurrencies by market cap.
Over the last 24 hours, the SUN price has dropped +0.68%. On the seven-day chart, Sun Token has climbed +1.83%, 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.
Sun Token's all-time high of $66.45 was set on September 11, 2020. The current market price is +99.97% 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.
How to buy Sun Token
Buying Sun Token (SUN) 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.
Choose a reputable exchange. Pick a platform that lists SUN with deep liquidity, transparent fees, and strong security practices. Our top-rated exchanges guide compares the leading venues side-by-side.
Create and verify your account.Complete the exchange's KYC process — most platforms require a government-issued ID and a short identity check. Verification is usually a one-time step that takes just a few minutes.
Deposit funds. Fund your account with fiat currency via bank transfer, card, or a stablecoin like USDT or USDC. Stablecoin deposits typically offer the fastest settlement and lowest fees.
Place a buy order. Navigate to the SUN/USD or SUN/USDT pair and either execute a market order for instant fills or set a limit order at your preferred entry price.
Secure your SUN. For long-term holdings, consider moving your tokens to a non-custodial wallet — a hardware device for the highest security, or a reputable software wallet for frequent access.
You can also use the built-in Sun Token converter above to estimate exactly how much SUN you would receive for a given amount in USD before placing an order.
Is Sun Token a good investment?
Whether Sun Token is a good investment depends on your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for volatility. Like all cryptocurrencies, SUN 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.
Potential strengths
Ranked #124 by market cap with an established trading history and active exchange coverage.
Ongoing ecosystem development and community engagement, as reflected in Decentralized Finance (DeFi), Tron Ecosystem sector activity.
Key risks to consider
Volatility: 24-hour moves of 5–15% are common in crypto markets.
Regulatory uncertainty: changes in policy across major jurisdictions can materially affect price and access.
Liquidity and custody risk: not all exchanges are equally safe, and self-custody requires careful key management.
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.