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Recently, I’ve seen a lot of people asking how to create their own tokens on BNB Chain, and I feel it’s necessary to explain this clearly. Many beginners think that spending 5 dollars can get their coin listed on a major exchange, but in reality, there’s a lot to learn here.
First, we need to make one thing clear: create bsc token and listing a coin on an exchange are two different things. The cost to create a BEP-20 token on-chain is indeed very low—deployment fees are usually under 5 dollars—but this is only the first step. The real trouble comes afterward.
Let’s talk about the technical side first. You need a Web3 wallet that supports BNB Chain—MetaMask or Trust Wallet both work. The key is to connect your wallet to the BNB Chain network, which requires manually configuring an RPC node. Then you need a bit of BNB in your wallet to pay the Gas fees during deployment. Even though the costs are cheap, this is still necessary.
BEP-20 is the standard token protocol on BNB Chain, similar to Ethereum’s ERC-20. If you understand Solidity programming, you can write your own smart contract, using tools like Remix IDE to write and deploy it. But if you can’t code, don’t panic—there are many no-code tools available that can help you generate contracts. Just fill out a form, define your token name, symbol, and total supply, choose the features you want—such as burnable, mintable, anti-whale mechanisms, and so on—and the platform will deploy it for you directly.
After deployment, it’s a good practice to verify your contract code on BscScan. This can increase trust. Then, import the token contract address into your wallet, and you’ll be able to see your token balance.
But the key point here is that if you really want this token to be tradable, you need to provide liquidity on a decentralized exchange like PancakeSwap, pairing it with BNB or BUSD. This requires real money investment.
To be honest, even though the cost of create bsc token on-chain is low, if you truly want to operate a successful project, the costs involved are actually quite high. Security audits, marketing and promotion, legal and regulatory compliance—none of these are cheap. So don’t be misled by the low deployment fees; the real investment comes afterward.