Binance Futures to Delist Multiple Perpetual Contracts: What Traders Need to Know
On December 1, Binance Futures issued an official notice confirming the delisting of several perpetual futures contracts across its USDⓈ-M and COIN-M markets. The exchange also warned traders that automatic liquidation will occur for open positions in these contracts before delisting takes effect.
The announcement comes as part of Binance’s ongoing effort to restructure its derivatives offerings, reduce risk exposure, and ensure regulatory compliance across global markets.
Which Contracts Are Being Delisted?
While Binance has not released the full list publicly in the brief announcement, these delistings typically involve:
- Low-liquidity perpetual contracts
- Underperforming or deprecated assets
- Markets with insufficient open interest
- Assets impacted by network issues or scheduled upgrades
Binance stated that a detailed list of affected contracts is provided within the full internal announcement. Traders are strongly encouraged to check the Derivatives Delisting Section of the Binance Futures dashboard.
Key Dates You Need to Know
December 1 — Announcement Released
Binance officially informed traders that certain perpetual futures will be removed.
Auto-Liquidation Phase (Exact times vary by contract)
Before delisting, Binance will:
- Halt new position creation
- Adjust margin requirements
- Trigger automatic settlement and liquidation for all remaining positions
Final Delisting Date
After auto-liquidation, contracts will be fully removed from the platform.
If traders don’t close positions manually, Binance will close them automatically — which may result in losses depending on volatility.
How This Impacts Traders
1. Open positions will be forcibly closed
Any trader with active exposure in the affected contracts will see their positions automatically closed at the time Binance determines.
2. Increased volatility risk before the shutdown
Final hours of trading typically experience:
- Sudden price swings
- Widened spreads
- Lower liquidity
3. Funding rate adjustments may occur
Binance sometimes sets funding rates to 0 before delisting, but not always.
4. API traders must update configurations
Bots relying on these contract tickers will fail if not updated.
What Traders Should Do Now
✅ 1. Check if you have open positions in affected contracts
Log in to Binance Futures → Positions → Filter by delisting notice.
✅ 2. Close or reduce risk manually
Relying on auto-liquidation may cause unnecessary losses.
✅ 3. Update trading bots and APIs
Remove deprecated contract symbols to avoid execution errors.
✅ 4. Prepare for volatility
Delistings typically create liquidation cascades in low-liquidity pairs.
Why Binance Is Delisting These Contracts
Binance routinely reviews market pairs and derivatives products to maintain:
- Market stability
- High liquidity
- Better user risk management
- Regulatory alignment
In 2024–2025, exchanges across the industry have aggressively trimmed derivative offerings due to increased regulatory scrutiny — especially around exotic or low-volume perpetuals.
Conclusion
The delisting of multiple Binance Futures perpetual contracts marks another step in the platform’s efforts to streamline markets and strengthen compliance. Traders holding any of the affected contracts must act quickly to prevent forced liquidation and unnecessary losses.
Expect tighter risk controls, more selective listings, and ongoing adjustments to Binance’s derivatives catalog throughout 2025–2026.







