Public token sales fall to four-year low, raising $40M in Q2 2026

3 days ago 3



The public token sale market just hit a wall. Q2 2026 saw just 47 sales raising a combined $40 million, numbers not seen since late 2020, when the crypto industry was a fraction of its current size.

To put that in perspective, Q1 2025 was the recent high-water mark, with nearly $849 million raised across 429 individual sales. The current quarter’s haul represents a roughly 95% decline from that peak in just over a year.

The numbers tell a brutal story

According to CryptoRank data, Q1 2026 still managed $389 million across 105 sales, which already represented a significant drop from peak levels. Q2 then proceeded to fall off a cliff.

By mid-June 2026, only 37 sales had occurred, raising approximately $58 million. That’s an 85% drop in capital raised and a 65% decline in the number of sales compared to the prior quarter.

May 2026 was particularly grim. Just 13 sales took place during the entire month, generating around $41 million. That made it the weakest single month for public token sales since December 2020.

What happened to the 2025 revival

Platforms like Echo and Legion facilitated over $200 million in public sales during 2025, helping to create what felt like a sustainable infrastructure for compliant retail token launches.

The momentum got a significant boost in November 2025, when Coinbase rolled out US retail-accessible token sales through its platform, starting with the Monad sale. For the first time in years, American retail investors had a straightforward, regulated path to participate in token launches without needing to navigate offshore platforms.

That combination of platform infrastructure and regulatory clarity pushed Q1 2025 to its record-breaking haul.

What this means for investors

Public token sales are one of the purest gauges of retail risk appetite in crypto. When retail is excited, these numbers boom. When retail retreats, they crater. Right now, they’re cratering.

Projects that might have launched through public sales will either need to rely more heavily on private venture rounds or delay launches entirely, meaning fewer new tokens entering the market in the near term.

The platforms that powered the 2025 revival—Echo, Legion, and Coinbase’s token sale infrastructure—remain operational. The rails exist. What’s missing is the demand to use them.

Investors watching for a turning point should track monthly sale counts as a leading indicator. A sustained move back above 30 sales per month with growing capital raised would suggest renewed confidence.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

Read Entire Article