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Which US stocks and tokens can you buy on Binance?

The moment a lot of people open a Binance account, the first thing they do is search "can I buy Tesla" or "is Nvidia there." The answer is yes — but "how you get that Tesla" actually comes in three forms, each with a different set of names and different rules. This guide lays out everything US-stock-related on Binance by category, then shows you how to check the latest list yourself — because that list changes almost every week.

Real US stocks, bStocks tokens and on-chain stocks shown side by side in the Binance interface
One Binance account actually plugs into three kinds of US-stock asset — real stocks, bStocks tokens, on-chain stocks — and the list you can buy differs for each.

A bit of cold water first: a lot of those "Binance supports stock XX" screenshots floating around online are out of date, or only capture one of the kinds. To get a clear read on what you can buy, you first need to know that Binance has actually wired three different channels into your account.

First, the three kinds: not the same thing

Even when you're buying Nvidia on Binance, you might end up with three completely different things:

  • Real US stocks / ETFs: the actual shares opened up from June 2026, held by licensed third-party brokers, with beneficial ownership going to you.
  • bStocks tokens: Binance's own tokenized securities, backed 1:1 in full, tradable 24/7, and convertible to and from the matching real stock at zero fee.
  • Ondo on-chain stocks: on-chain tokens that run in the Binance Web3 Wallet and Binance Alpha, issued by Ondo Finance, carrying an "on" suffix (AAPLon and the like).

We pick apart what really separates the three, and who each suits, in detail in the three routes: real stocks / bStocks / on-chain compared; this guide only covers "which names each one lets you buy."

Real stocks and ETFs: 7,000-plus

This is the biggest slice by range. In early June 2026 Binance opened up 7,000-plus real US stocks and ETFs, held behind the scenes by third-party brokers like Alpaca, where what you buy is beneficial ownership of the real share — you collect dividends normally, and some names support 24/5 trading.

At that scale it basically covers every US stock you could name: large caps like Apple, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla, Amazon and Google go without saying, and a huge number of mid- and small-caps plus popular ETFs (funds tracking the S&P 500, Nasdaq-100 funds and so on) are in there too. The traits:

  • Zero commission, with orders starting from roughly $5.
  • Supports fractional shares — no need to scrape together a whole share, a few dollars buys a small slice.
  • Open to non-US users only.

To see exactly how the fees here work, see Binance US-stock fees; for what fractional shares are, see what fractional shares are.

bStocks tokens: the first batch

bStocks are Binance's own tokenized securities, built around 1:1 full backing, 24/7 trading, and 1:1 zero-fee conversion to and from the real stock. The point of them: hold the real stock during the day if you want a long hold, switch to the token if you want to act in the middle of the night — and moving back and forth costs nothing.

The first batch isn't long, but they're all high-profile names:

NameTickerCompany
Nvidia tokenNVDABNVIDIA
Tesla tokenTSLABTesla
Circle tokenCircle
Micron tokenMUBMicron
SanDisk tokenSNDKBSanDisk

bStocks is the launch list, and it'll very likely keep expanding. To put bStocks next to the xStocks on Kraken and Bybit, see the difference between bStocks and xStocks.

Ondo on-chain stocks: the ones in the wallet

The third kind lives in the Binance Web3 Wallet and the "Stocks" section of Binance Alpha, issued by Ondo Finance from February 2026. They carry an "on" suffix, which makes them easy to spot:

  • AAPLon — Apple
  • GOOGLon — Google
  • TSLAon — Tesla
  • NVDAon — Nvidia
  • QQQon — Nasdaq-100 ETF

The traits of this route: fees can be as low as 0%, it runs fully on-chain, and it can go into DeFi for building strategies — but the price is that it's on-chain self-custody, and losing your private key means genuinely losing your money. For how to operate inside the wallet, see buying on-chain US stocks in the Binance Web3 Wallet.

We tried it

We clicked through all three routes on the same Nvidia in one account: searching NVIDIA in spot brings up the real-stock order page, you can find NVDAB in the bStocks section, and switching to the Stocks section of the Web3 Wallet turns up NVDAon. Same company, three entry points, three quotes, three sets of rules. This is exactly the step where beginners get mixed up — before you rush to order, confirm which kind you've clicked into. That matters more than the order itself.

How to check the latest list

Because the list changes fast, rather than memorizing ours, it's better to learn to check it yourself. Three places are the most accurate:

  • Real US stocks: in the stock / Stocks section of the Binance app or website, just search the company name or ticker — if it comes up, it's supported.
  • bStocks: check the Binance announcements page and the tokenized-securities section in spot; new names usually come with an announcement.
  • On-chain stocks: open the Binance Web3 Wallet, go to the "Stocks" section under Markets — the ones with an "on" suffix are the Ondo batch.
A quick way to tellIf your search turns up a clean company ticker (like NVDA or TSLA), it's usually the real stock; ending in B (NVDAB) is most likely bStocks; an "on" suffix (NVDAon) is an on-chain stock. The suffix alone gets you most of the way to knowing which route you're buying.

Want to search through it yourself?

You need an account before you can see the live list and quotes. Sign up with our referral code BN0426 for a 20% fee discount*, then click through each of the three entry points above.

Sign up on Binance · BN0426 →

Regional differences: yours may not match

This is the easiest thing to come up empty on. The same Binance, logged in from different countries or regions, shows different names and different features. The reason is that rules vary by jurisdiction, and Binance opens up different ranges of products to meet local compliance requirements.

  • Not open to US users: this is a hard rule — users inside the US can't buy any of these US-stock-related products.
  • The buyable range of real US stocks splits by region: some regions get the full set, others only a portion.
  • On-chain stocks follow the Web3 Wallet's regional policy: some Binance Alpha features are also opened up by region.

So what someone online shows they can buy, you might not be able to; what's actually shown in your own account is the most reliable thing to go by. To walk the whole ordering flow from the start, head back to the complete Binance US-stock guide.

The lists we put together here may lag behind Binance's actual updates; the final word is what Binance's official pages show. We don't provide investment advice.

Further reading