Over 50% of all cryptocurrencies have died, according to an extensive research report. And of the over 24,000 cryptocurrencies listed on CoinGecko since 2014, there are a total of 14,039 that have died (at the time of writing).
Most dead cryptocurrencies came from projects launched “during the 2020 – 2021 bull run. 7,530 cryptocurrencies from that period have died, accounting for 53.6% of all dead cryptocurrencies” on CoinGecko.
Over 11,000 cryptocurrencies were listed on CoinGecko “during the previous bull run, with ~70% having shut down since.”
In comparison, 1,450 projects “launched during the 2017 – 2018 bull run have since shut down.”
This is on the back of over 3,000 cryptocurrencies listed, “resulting in a similar failure rate of ~70%.”
The high number of dead coins “during the 2020 – 2021 period can be attributed to the ease of deploying tokens, and the rise in popularity of memecoins.”
However, many memecoin projects launch “without a product, with the majority being abandoned after a short period of time.”
5,724 cryptocurrencies from 2021 have failed
Cryptocurrencies launched in 2021 have “suffered the worst, with 5,724 having died as of January 2024. Over 70% of cryptocurrencies listed on CoinGecko in 2021 have died, making it the worst year for project launches.”
This is followed by 2022 listed cryptocurrencies, “with 3,520 having died thus far, a rate of ~60%.”
289 cryptocurrencies listed “on CoinGecko in 2023 died. This represents a failure rate of <10%, with over 4,000 cryptocurrencies listed, a sharp decline from previous years.”
Methodology
This study examines the total number of coins and tokens, “collectively termed as ‘cryptocurrencies’, once listed on CoinGecko that are now deactivated (‘dead’ or ‘failed’), grouped by the year it was listed, from 2014 to 2023, year-to-date.”
Cryptocurrencies may be deactivated and delisted from CoinGecko based on the following circumstances:
- Cryptocurrencies do not reflect any trade activity within the last 30 days.
- Projects are revealed as a scam or rug pull, through the news or direct reports to CoinGecko from verifiable sources.
- Projects request to be deactivated, i.e. when the team disbands, rebrands, shutters the project, or undergo major token overhauls where old tokens become sufficiently illiquid or dead, according to CoinGecko standards.