THORChain is a network built for one specific job: swapping native assets across different blockchains without bridges, wrappers, or pegged tokens. You send real BTC from a Bitcoin wallet, you receive real ETH at an Ethereum address, and the protocol handles everything between those two events. The project started in 2018 under pseudonymous founders (most associated with the handle @Mr_Yondaime), and mainnet went live in April 2021. The codebase is built on the Cosmos SDK with CometBFT consensus.
RUNE is the native asset. The original supply was 500 million; reserve burns over the years have set 500M as the effective hard cap, and roughly 343M+ are circulating across 2024 and 2025. RUNE is more than a governance token. It sits at the center of every pool, it is the collateral validators bond, and the protocol uses it as the settlement asset between every cross-chain pair. THORChain runs as its own L1 and connects to Bitcoin, Ethereum, BNB Chain, Cosmos, Avalanche, Litecoin, Bitcoin Cash, Dogecoin, and a growing list of other chains. For the chain-architecture context, the Cosmos page covers the SDK and CometBFT layer the protocol is built on.
RUNE price today
RUNE trades on most major spot venues. The deepest pairs are RUNE/USDT, RUNE/USD, and RUNE/BTC, with meaningful on-chain depth in RUNE pools on THORChain itself. 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.
What actually moves RUNE on a typical week:
Cross-chain swap volume on THORChain. Protocol revenue scales with throughput. When BTC/ETH and BTC/stablecoin native swap volume picks up, fees flow to LPs and bonded validators, and RUNE gets a bid.
The 1:3 bond ratio. THORChain enforces a target where validators bond $3 of RUNE economic security for every $1 of pooled assets. When the ratio drifts too low, the protocol incentivizes more bonding; when it climbs too high, pool incentives rise. Traders watch the live ratio because it tells you which side of the seesaw is pulling.
THORFi restructuring. The 2024 lending and savings pause is still working its way through governance. Resolutions on bad debt, treasury commitments, and unwind timelines move RUNE in both directions.
Maya Protocol competition. Maya is a fork that targets the same cross-chain swap niche. Volume share between the two networks is a genuine drag or boost on RUNE, depending on which way it tips.
FAQ
What is THORChain used for?
THORChain is a Layer 1 built for native cross-chain swaps. Users send a native asset like BTC from a Bitcoin wallet and receive a different native asset like ETH at an Ethereum address, with no bridge tokens, no wrappers, and no custodial intermediary. The protocol holds inventory in joint vaults controlled by validators and routes every swap through RUNE-paired pools. RUNE itself works as the settlement asset, validator collateral, and incentive token for the entire system.
How does THORChain swap BTC for ETH without a bridge?
Validators jointly control vault addresses on Bitcoin, Ethereum, and every other connected chain. The user sends real BTC to the Bitcoin inbound vault. The protocol prices the swap through two pool hops, BTC against RUNE first and then RUNE against ETH, and the Ethereum vault sends real ETH to the user’s destination address. RUNE acts as the settlement leg, but the user never holds it. There is no wrapped BTC or pegged token at any step in the flow.
What is the 1:3 economic security model?
For every $1 of external assets sitting in THORChain pools, the active validator set is supposed to bond at least $3 of RUNE as collateral. The idea is that if every validator could collude and drain the vaults, their combined bond should still exceed what they could steal, which makes the attack economically irrational. The protocol monitors this ratio in real time and rebalances yields between bonding and pooling to keep validators incentivized to bond more RUNE when the ratio drops below the target.
What happened with THORFi in 2024?
THORFi was the lending and savings layer built on top of THORChain. In June 2024 the protocol briefly halted activity after liquidity stress in the savings and lending stack. In November 2024 governance approved a restructure to address bad debt and unwind positions. Lending and savings products remain in a paused or wind-down state through the restructuring. Core swap functionality and validator bonding kept running throughout, but the unwind has put real supply pressure on RUNE.
THORChain vs Maya: which is better?
Maya Protocol is a 2023 fork that runs as its own chain with CACAO as the native asset. The designs are very similar; the main differences are scale and asset coverage. THORChain has more liquidity, longer track record, and broader chain support. Maya runs leaner, supports a few chains THORChain has not prioritized, and gives users a real alternative if they want diversification away from a single network. For most users with average-size swaps, THORChain wins on depth. Power users sometimes split flow between both.
Is RUNE a good investment?
RUNE is a high-beta bet on native cross-chain swap demand, the success of the THORFi unwind, and the durability of the 1:3 economic security model. The all-time high near $21 came in May 2021, and prices have been substantially lower since. Code-history risk, ongoing competition from Maya and native bridges, and validator-set concentration all matter. Treat it as a high-risk infrastructure position, size it accordingly, and assume volatility similar to other mid-cap altcoins.
Where can I buy RUNE?
RUNE trades on Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, KuCoin, Bybit, and Bitfinex with deep liquidity in RUNE/USDT, RUNE/USD, and RUNE/BTC pairs. You can also buy RUNE directly through THORChain frontends like Thorswap, Asgardex, or Vultisig if you already hold native BTC, ETH, or stablecoins in a self-custody wallet. After the purchase, move long-term holdings to a hardware wallet or threshold-signature setup, especially if you plan to bond RUNE for validation.
Can RUNE be staked?
RUNE does not have classic delegated proof-of-stake staking. The closest equivalent is bonding RUNE as validator (Node) collateral, which earns a share of swap fees and block rewards. Bonding requires running a node and meeting the active-set bond minimum, which floats with churn. Below that threshold, delegation through a node-operator service is the practical path. RUNE holders can also LP into THORChain pools to earn swap fees, which is closer in feel to staking but carries impermanent-loss risk against the paired external asset.
BTC correlation. THORChain swap demand is heavily tied to Bitcoin liquidity. Most RUNE moves on daily charts track BTC first; protocol-specific drivers show up over weekly and monthly windows.
The numbers in the price card above are live. For multi-year scenarios, see our THORChain price forecast.
How native cross-chain swaps work on THORChain
Most "cross-chain" products are bridges. They lock BTC on Bitcoin, mint a wrapped IOU on the destination chain, and trust a multisig or a relayer not to lose the underlying. THORChain does not do this. Every swap moves real native assets on both sides, and the protocol itself holds the inventory.
Inbound vaults. THORChain validators jointly control vault addresses on every connected chain. Bitcoin vaults hold real BTC, Ethereum vaults hold real ETH and ERC-20s, and so on. To start a swap, the user sends native asset to the inbound vault on the source chain.
RUNE as the settlement leg. Every pool is paired against RUNE. A BTC-to-ETH swap is really two pool hops: BTC out of the BTC pool against RUNE, then RUNE into the ETH pool against ETH. The user never touches RUNE; the protocol handles the routing.
Outbound on the destination chain. Once the price is calculated, the destination-chain vault sends native asset to the user’s receiving address. No wrapping, no bridge token, no IOU.
Memo field as instructions. The swap intent, slippage limit, and destination address ride in the transaction memo. The protocol parses the memo and executes accordingly.
Confirmation windows scale with size. Big swaps wait for more confirmations on the source chain before the outbound leg fires. This is how the protocol reduces reorg risk on Bitcoin and other PoW chains.
The result is a swap experience that feels closer to using a centralized exchange than a typical DEX, except no account, no custody, and no wrapped tokens are involved at any point. Frontends like Thorswap, Asgardex, and Vultisig wrap this flow in a friendly UI.
RUNE economic security: validators, bonds, and the 1:3 model
THORChain calls its validators "Nodes." There are typically around 100 active nodes at any time, with rotating churn that swaps in higher bidders and rotates out under-bonded ones. To run a node, you bond RUNE as collateral. If the node misbehaves, that bond gets slashed.
The 1:3 model. For every $1 of asset value sitting in pools, the active validator set is supposed to bond $3 in RUNE economic security. The math is simple: if the entire validator set could collude and steal pooled assets, their combined bond should be worth more than what they could steal. The protocol checks this ratio continuously and adjusts incentives.
Two RUNE pots: bonded vs pooled. Bonded RUNE sits with validators as collateral. Pooled RUNE sits in liquidity pools paired against external assets. The split between the two changes the protocol’s security profile and is one of the more-watched on-chain metrics.
Churn cycles. Every few days the protocol churns out a small number of nodes and churns in replacements based on bond size. This rotates risk and prevents permanent validator-set capture.
Slashing. Nodes that double-sign, fail to perform vault duties, or otherwise misbehave lose part of their bond. Slashing has been used in practice and is not just a paper risk.
Yield to bonded RUNE. Validators earn a share of swap fees and block rewards on top of their bond. That yield is a genuine reason large RUNE holders run nodes (or delegate via node-operator services) rather than just LPing.
When the bond-to-pool ratio drops below the 1:3 target, pool yields fall and bond yields rise to attract more RUNE into validator collateral. When it climbs above target, the reverse happens. The mechanism is one of the more original parts of the design, and it is what keeps the cross-chain vault model honest without requiring trust in any individual operator.
Liquidity providers, savers vaults, and the THORFi pause
There are several ways to put capital to work on THORChain. The classic path is dual-sided LP: deposit equal value of an asset (BTC, ETH, etc.) and RUNE into a pool, earn a share of swap fees and emissions, accept the impermanent-loss profile that comes with any AMM. The newer path was savers vaults, which let users LP single-sided in just the external asset, no RUNE leg required, with the protocol synthesizing the missing side internally.
Dual LP. The original model. Deposits are 50/50 by value, withdrawals can be in either asset, and yield comes from swap fees plus RUNE incentives.
Savers vaults. Deposit only the external asset (BTC savers, ETH savers, etc.). Yield comes from swap activity. Capital efficiency is lower than dual LP, but the user-experience win was real for holders who did not want RUNE exposure.
THORFi lending and borrowing. Launched in 2023. Users locked collateral (BTC, ETH) and borrowed against it in TOR-denominated debt, with the lending engine relying on RUNE as the swap medium between collateral and debt.
June 2024 halt. THORChain briefly halted swap and lending activity after liquidity issues in the THORFi savings/lending stack. Lending was paused while engineers and governance assessed exposure.
November 2024 restructure. Governance approved a restructure of THORFi to address bad debt and unwind positions. Savers and lending products remain in a paused or wind-down state through this restructuring period, and the supply-side pressure on RUNE during the unwind has been a real overhang on price.
For an LP today, the practical picture is simpler than the headlines suggest. Dual-sided LP and node bonding still work as designed; the THORFi-specific products are the ones in restructure mode. Anyone considering RUNE exposure should know which side of that line they are on.
THORChain vs Maya Protocol vs centralized cross-chain swaps
THORChain has competition on two fronts. The first is Maya Protocol, a 2023 fork that runs as its own chain with CACAO as its native asset. Maya copied the THORChain design closely, runs against many of the same chains, and competes for native cross-chain swap volume directly. The second is centralized exchanges and bridge-based swap products, which are still where most cross-chain volume lives today.
Maya Protocol. Forked from THORChain in 2023. Uses CACAO instead of RUNE for the same role. Adds support for some chains THORChain has not prioritized. Smaller liquidity overall, but real volume and a legitimate alternative for users who want a backup network or different fee profile.
Centralized exchanges. Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, and similar venues let users deposit BTC and withdraw ETH in two clicks. The cost is custody (your funds sit on the exchange) and KYC. For most retail users this is still the path of least resistance.
Bridge-based swaps. Wormhole, Across, Stargate, and friends move wrapped or canonical-bridged assets between chains. Fast, but the destination asset is usually a wrapped IOU, not native. They are not direct DEX competitors in the sense that Uniswap is for in-chain swaps; THORChain competes more with that style of DEX once you add the cross-chain leg.
Native cross-chain bridges (CCTP, native ETH-to-Solana bridges). Newer designs from Circle and others move stablecoins or specific assets natively between chains without wrapping. They cover narrower asset sets than THORChain but are growing fast and may compress the niche over time.
THORChain’s defensible edge is the BTC leg. Native Bitcoin is hard for everyone else to handle, and THORChain plus Maya are among the few protocols that move real BTC into and out of other ecosystems without a wrapped intermediate. That is the use case where the design pays for itself.
How to buy and bond RUNE
RUNE is widely listed and easy to acquire. The more interesting question is what you plan to do once you hold it: sit on it, LP it, or run it as validator collateral. The path looks like this.
Pick a venue. Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, KuCoin, Bybit, and Bitfinex all list RUNE with USD, USDT, and BTC pairs. Our exchange ratings compare the leading platforms on fees, security audits, and supported networks.
Or buy RUNE through a THORChain frontend. Thorswap is the most popular interface and supports buying RUNE with native BTC, ETH, or stablecoins from a self-custody wallet. Asgardex is a desktop alternative; Vultisig adds threshold-signature custody for users who want a multi-device setup.
Verify identity if you went the centralized route. Regulated exchanges ask for a government ID and a selfie. KYC usually clears within 10 minutes.
Move RUNE to a self-custody wallet. THORWallet, Vultisig, and Trust Wallet all support native RUNE. Hardware wallets (Ledger, Trezor) cover RUNE through compatible apps. Send a small test transaction first before moving any meaningful amount to a new address.
Decide what to do with it. Hold passively, LP into a THORChain pool through a frontend, or bond as validator collateral. Bonding requires a minimum bond size that floats with the active set; below that threshold, delegation through a node-operator service is the realistic path. Voting and governance participation happen through the same wallets that hold the RUNE.
The RUNE all-time high near $21 in May 2021 sits well above current levels. Anyone considering long-dated exposure should size positions assuming the same kind of volatility that produced that high (and the drawdown that followed) is still on the table.
Risks of holding THORChain
THORChain has a specific risk profile shaped by what the protocol does and what it has been through. The list below is RUNE-specific rather than generic crypto-volatility boilerplate.
THORFi restructure overhang. The 2024 pause and governance restructure of lending and savings is still working through. Bad-debt unwinds, treasury commitments, and timeline uncertainty all add real selling pressure to RUNE while resolutions land.
Economic-security tail risk. The 1:3 bond ratio is a model, not a guarantee. If RUNE price falls fast and bonded RUNE de-rates faster than pooled assets, the security margin compresses and the protocol can enter a state where collusion becomes economically rational. The mechanism is designed to react, but a fast-enough drawdown is a real edge case.
Code and security history. Two summer 2021 exploits drained roughly $8M combined and forced a significant code refactor. The protocol has run without major exploits since, but the codebase is genuinely complex (vault math, cross-chain coordination, churn logic) and the surface area is wide.
Maya Protocol and native-bridge competition. Maya competes for the same native cross-chain swap volume on a similar design. Native-bridge products from Circle (CCTP) and others are eating specific asset routes (USDC cross-chain in particular). The defensible BTC leg is real but not the entire moat.
Validator concentration and churn. Around 100 active nodes is a much smaller validator set than Ethereum or Bitcoin mining. Operator concentration in any specific jurisdiction or hosting provider is a real correlated-failure risk.
Custody. RUNE on a centralized exchange depends on the exchange’s solvency. Long-term holdings belong on a hardware wallet or threshold-signature setup. Bonding for validation requires self-custody by design.
This page is information, not financial advice. Talk to a licensed advisor before allocating real capital.
THORChain price analysis
At the time of writing, THORChain (RUNE) trades at $0.421694, with a 24-hour trading volume of $64.57M and a total market capitalization of $142.64M. The asset is currently ranked #209 among all tracked cryptocurrencies by market cap.
Over the last 24 hours, the RUNE price has dropped +0.70%. On the seven-day chart, THORChain has climbed +8.80%, 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.
THORChain's all-time high of $20.87 was set on May 19, 2021. The current market price is +97.98% 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 THORChain
Buying THORChain (RUNE) 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 RUNE 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 RUNE/USD or RUNE/USDT pair and either execute a market order for instant fills or set a limit order at your preferred entry price.
Secure your RUNE. 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 THORChain converter above to estimate exactly how much RUNE you would receive for a given amount in USD before placing an order.
Is THORChain a good investment?
Whether THORChain is a good investment depends on your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for volatility. Like all cryptocurrencies, RUNE 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 #209 by market cap with an established trading history and active exchange coverage.
Ongoing ecosystem development and community engagement, as reflected in Decentralized Exchange (DEX), Infrastructure 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.