Binance to Remove ME/USDC, NOT/FDUSD, PARTI/BNB and SUPER/BTC Spot Trading Pairs
Binance to Remove ME/USDC, NOT/FDUSD, PARTI/BNB and SUPER/BTC Spot Trading Pairs
Binance is continuing its routine spot market housekeeping—an important reminder that in crypto, market access can change even when the underlying token remains tradable. On June 23, 2026, Binance published a notice stating it will remove several spot trading pairs as part of its periodic review process. You can read the full details in Binance’s official removal notice.
What’s being removed (and when)
Binance will remove and cease trading for the following spot trading pairs:
- ME/USDC
- NOT/FDUSD
- PARTI/BNB
- SUPER/BTC
Effective time: 2026-06-26 03:00 (UTC), which is 2026-06-26 11:00 (UTC+8).
For users in the United States, that corresponds to June 25, 2026 evening (e.g., 11:00 PM EDT / 8:00 PM PDT, depending on your time zone and daylight saving rules).
Spot Trading Bots will stop at the same time
If you run automated strategies, note that Binance will terminate Spot Trading Bots services for the affected pairs at the same cutoff time. Binance explicitly advises users to update or cancel bots in advance to reduce the risk of unintended behavior when a market disappears. (Reference: Binance’s official removal notice.)
Pair removal ≠ token delisting: what actually changes
A trading pair being removed is mainly a market-structure change, not necessarily a verdict on a project.
According to Binance, removing a spot trading pair does not automatically remove the tokens from Binance Spot—the assets may still be available via other markets on the exchange. In practice, that means:
- You may still be able to trade ME, NOT, PARTI, or SUPER on Binance, but not through the specific quote asset shown above.
- Liquidity may concentrate into remaining pairs, which can change spreads, slippage, and execution quality—especially for strategies that depend on a specific quote currency like USDC or FDUSD, or a base route like BTC.
Why exchanges remove spot pairs (liquidity is usually the real reason)
Most large exchanges regularly prune pairs to keep order books healthy. Binance notes that reviews can consider factors such as liquidity and trading volume. More context is available in Binance Delisting Guidelines & Frequently Asked Questions.
In 2025 and 2026, many traders have also seen a broader shift toward stablecoin-quoted liquidity (often consolidating around a smaller set of high-demand routes). When a quote asset becomes less favored for flow routing, related pairs can become “thin,” making them candidates for removal during periodic reviews.
For readers tracking stablecoin credibility and reserve transparency, it can be helpful to review issuer disclosures such as Circle’s USDC transparency resources and First Digital Labs’ FDUSD information.
Action checklist for traders (before 2026-06-26)
To reduce operational surprises, consider the following steps:
-
Review your exposure by trading pair (not just by token)
If your entries, exits, or hedges specifically rely on ME/USDC or SUPER/BTC, plan an alternate execution route on Binance ahead of the cutoff. -
Update or cancel Spot Trading Bots
Any bot tied to the removed pairs should be adjusted before the market closure to avoid failed orders or unintended routing behavior. See the bot termination note in Binance’s official removal notice. -
If you trade via API, refresh symbol lists and routing logic
A clean implementation is to re-pull the active spot symbols and confirm thestatusbefore placing orders. Binance provides an overview approach in How to retrieve Binance spot symbols via API. -
Bookmark the official delisting feed
Pair changes can be frequent, especially across niche quote assets. Binance explains where to find delisting information in How to View Delisting Information for Tokens & Spot or Margin Trading Pairs on Binance.
A custody takeaway: separate “trading balances” from “long-term holdings”
Events like spot pair removals are a practical reminder to separate execution venue risk from asset ownership:
- Exchanges are efficient for trading and liquidity access.
- Self-custody is designed for control and long-term storage, independent of listing decisions or market maintenance updates.
If you prefer keeping long-term holdings off-exchange, a hardware wallet like OneKey can help you store private keys offline and manage assets across multiple chains—so you can trade when needed, but custody by default when you don’t.
Conclusion
Binance’s upcoming removal of ME/USDC, NOT/FDUSD, PARTI/BNB, and SUPER/BTC on June 26, 2026 (11:00 UTC+8) is primarily a pair-level market structure change, with the most immediate impact on bot users, API traders, and anyone dependent on those exact quote routes. Plan your alternate trading path early, and treat exchange connectivity as an execution layer—not the foundation of custody.



