Here’s a breakdown of the latest on Binance and REI Network (REI) — what’s changed, why it matters, and what’s next.
✅ What happened
Binance announced it will delist REI (along with StaFi (FIS) and Voxies (VOXEL)) from all spot-trading pairs on 17 December 2025 at 03:00 UTC.
The delisting decision is attributed to poor liquidity and low trading volume — REI reportedly had less than US$1 million in daily volume before the announcement.
Binance’s spot-asset review process considered multiple factors: trading volume/liquidity, network activity, tokenomics changes, project transparency, and team activity. REI (and the others) failed to meet those standards.
🔎 What led up to this
Back in May 2025, Binance had already placed REI under its “Monitoring Tag” regime, along with a handful of other altcoins — a warning sign that the exchange was scrutinizing REI for risks such as volatility, weak volume, or lack of activity.
Tokens under the Monitoring Tag are subject to stricter oversight; Binance has indicated that such tagging could lead to eventual delisting if the underlying issues aren’t resolved.
⚠️ What this means
After 17 December 2025, spot trading for REI on Binance will no longer be available. This also affects associated services like trading bots, copy-trading, margin, and other features tied to REI on the platform.
If you hold REI tokens on Binance: you should consider withdrawing them before delisting goes into effect (or check if Binance issues any extended withdrawal timeline/update).
Delisting reflects Binance’s broader stricter asset-listing criteria (liquidity, transparency, regulatory compliance, project activity) — meaning not all tokens survive under current market conditions.
🧰 What traders/investors should do
If you believe in REI’s long-term viability, consider moving your tokens off centralized exchanges — e.g. to a self-custody wallet — to avoid risks tied to delisting.
Watch for announcements from REI’s team / community: sometimes delisted tokens re-list on other exchanges or rel$REI

