A Big Token Unlock Is Coming — Should I Sell? A Calm Decision Framework
How vesting really moves price — and how to decide without panic
| The question | The quick answer |
|---|---|
| Do unlocks usually push price down? | Yes — ~90% negative across 16,000+ events (Keyrock); 88.5% negative within 72h (SSRN 2026) |
| What size unlock should worry me? | 5%+ of circulating supply = strong sell pressure; under 1% is usually noise |
| Does it matter who gets the tokens? | A lot — team cliffs are worst (~-25%); ecosystem/treasury averaged +1.18% |
| Cliff or linear? | Cliff = one scary date, concentrated risk; linear = a drip the market absorbs |
| What’s the FDV trap? | High FDV + low float = huge future dilution you already own — read it as a warning, not a target |
| Should I sell on unlock day? | Often the worst timing — weakness starts ~30 days early, so unlock day can be the bottom |
| Do all unlocks dump? | No — ~10% don’t; small, priced-in, ecosystem, or high-demand unlocks can hold |
| Right now (late June 2026)? | $735M+ wave: MegaETH (MEGA), Humanity (H), Sahara AI (SAHARA) — thin floats, tougher backdrop |
This is education, not financial advice. Verify every unlock on a live calendar before you act.
1. So your token has an unlock next week — start here, not with a sell button
2. First move: pull the date up on a calendar and read three numbers
3. Number one — how big is it? The 5%-of-float line that separates noise from overhang
4. Number two — who’s getting the tokens? Why a team cliff hurts more than an ecosystem release
5. Number three — cliff or linear? Why one date scares the market and a slow drip doesn’t
6. The trap that fools everyone: FDV vs market cap, and the high-FDV/low-float overhang
7. What the data actually says: Keyrock’s 16,000 events and the 2026 SSRN Binance study
8. ‘Already priced in’ — why the dump often happens 30 days before the date, not on it
9. Case study: how Arbitrum’s 1.1B-token ARB unlock actually played out
10. Live right now: the final week of June 2026 and its $735M wave
11. When an unlock doesn’t dump — the ~10% of cases and what offsets supply
12. Your decision framework: four questions instead of a reflex sell
13. Hedging without selling your bag: perps, partial trims, and the tax event
14. Where these tokens trade (and where they don’t yet) — spot, perps, and Binance Alpha
There’s an unlock on your calendar and your thumb is over the sell button. Before you tap it: an unlock is just the day a batch of pre-promised tokens becomes free to move — you already knew they existed. The real questions are how big it is, who gets it, what shape it releases in, and whether the market already sold it weeks ago. The data leans bearish (about 90% of unlocks drag price down), but the worst trade is panic-selling on the exact day the smart money already finished. Let’s read the unlock together, then decide.
1. So your token has an unlock next week — start here, not with a sell button
Here’s the situation. You’re holding something — let’s say it’s an alt you bought a few months back — and you just noticed an unlock is hitting next Tuesday. Now there’s a little knot in your stomach and a finger hovering over the sell button. I want to talk you off that button for a minute, because selling on reflex is exactly how people hand their tokens to whoever’s calmer than they are.
An unlock is just the day a batch of tokens that were locked up — promised to a team, a fund, an early backer, an ecosystem wallet — becomes free to move. Those tokens always existed and you knew about them, at least in theory. What changes on unlock day is that they can finally hit the market. Whether they actually do, and whether anyone cares, is the whole question this article tries to answer.
2. First move: pull the date up on a calendar and read three numbers
Before you have an opinion, get the facts. Pull up a token-unlock calendar and find your coin. Three tools do this well, and they’re free:
| Tool | Where | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Tokenomist | tokenomist.ai | Calendar view, cliff vs linear flag, dollar amounts per event |
| CryptoRank | cryptorank.io/token-unlock | Per-coin vesting dashboard, allocation breakdown |
| DropsTab | dropstab.com/vesting | 9,000+ tokens, fundraising history, who got what |
Open one, type your ticker, and write down three numbers. That’s it — three numbers tell you most of what you need:
- How big is the unlock as a share of what’s already circulating?
- Who is receiving the tokens — team, a venture fund, the community, an ecosystem treasury?
- What shape is the release — one giant chunk on a single date, or a slow daily drip?
The next three sections take those one at a time. Don’t skip to the framework until you can answer all three for your own bag, because the framework is useless without them.
3. Number one — how big is it? The 5%-of-float line that separates noise from overhang
Start with size, because it filters out most of the noise. A 0.3% unlock on a liquid mid-cap is a rounding error — it can clear in an hour of normal volume and nobody blinks. A 15% unlock is a different animal entirely.
The rough line traders watch is 5% of circulating supply. Below it, context decides everything. At or above it, you’re looking at real overhang — enough new sellable supply that even a calm market has to absorb a wall.
| Unlock as % of circulating supply | What it usually means |
|---|---|
| Under 1% | Usually negligible — market noise, don’t lose sleep |
| 1% to 5% | Moderate — read the context (who, what shape, demand) |
| 5% or more | Strong sell-pressure signal — treat it seriously |
| 20%+ (ARB added ~45%) | Severe dilution — a structural event, not a blip |
Keyrock, which crunched more than 16,000 unlock events, found the obvious-but-important thing: bigger unlocks hurt more, roughly 2.4x sharper drops and a lot more volatility than small ones. Size isn’t the only factor, but it’s the one that scales the damage.
4. Number two — who’s getting the tokens? Why a team cliff hurts more than an ecosystem release
Now: who actually gets these tokens? This matters more than people expect, because different holders behave completely differently when their stash frees up.
| Recipient | Typical price effect | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Team / founders | Worst — around -25% | Concentrated, often less price-sensitive, they sell to pay bills and de-risk |
| VC / early investor | Controlled negative | They hedge, sell OTC, exit in tranches — smarter selling, smaller spot footprint than feared |
| Community / airdrop | All over the map | Thousands of small holders; can dump fast or barely move |
| Ecosystem / treasury | Can be positive — avg +1.18% | Often deployed into grants and liquidity, not sold |
| Locked-staking / restake | Lower pressure | Tokens get re-locked, never really hit the order book |
Sit with that ecosystem row for a second, because it’s the one most people get wrong. An ecosystem or treasury unlock averaged slightly positive in Keyrock’s data — a tiny +1.18%. That makes sense: a treasury usually puts tokens to work funding the network rather than dumping them on you. So “10 million tokens unlocking” tells you almost nothing until you know whether they’re going to a founder’s wallet or an ecosystem fund. Same headline, opposite trade.
5. Number three — cliff or linear? Why one date scares the market and a slow drip doesn’t
Last of the three numbers: the shape of the release. There are two main flavors, and the market reacts to them very differently.
| Type | How it releases | Sell-pressure profile |
|---|---|---|
| Cliff | One big tranche, single date | Highest — concentrated, scary, headline-grabbing |
| Linear | A little every day or month | Lower — pressure spread thin over time |
| Hybrid | Big initial chunk, then a drip | Front-loaded spike, then it tails off |
A cliff is what fuels the “unlock = dump” fear, and fairly so: a wall of supply appears on one calendar day, the chart has a circle drawn on it weeks in advance, and everyone watches the same date. Linear vesting is gentler — a steady trickle the market chews through without ever facing a single dramatic moment. If your token releases linearly, the unlock you’re staring at might already be happening, quietly, a sliver at a time, and “the date” you’re scared of barely exists.
6. The trap that fools everyone: FDV vs market cap, and the high-FDV/low-float overhang
Here’s the trap that catches almost everyone, and it has a name: FDV.
Market cap is price times the supply that’s actually circulating — the tokens out in the wild today. Fully diluted valuation (FDV) is price times the total supply, including every token still locked. When a coin has a small float and a huge total supply, those two numbers can be miles apart.
And that gap is your future. A token trading at a $200M market cap with a $2B FDV is telling you, plainly, that roughly ten times the current supply is still coming. Every one of those locked tokens is a future unlock you already own a slice of dilution from. That’s why a “high FDV, low float” coin is a red flag — not because the project is bad, but because the overhang is enormous and it’s all going to arrive on a schedule you can read in advance.
The practical takeaway: before you stress about one upcoming unlock, glance at the FDV-to-market-cap ratio. If it’s 5x or 10x, this unlock isn’t a one-off — it’s the first of many, and your real question isn’t “this Tuesday” but “do I want to hold through years of scheduled dilution?”
7. What the data actually says: Keyrock’s 16,000 events and the 2026 SSRN Binance study
So is the fear justified? Mostly, yes — and two solid datasets say so.
| Study | Sample | Headline finding | Window |
|---|---|---|---|
| Keyrock | 16,000+ unlock events | ~90% saw negative price impact | Weakness starts ~30 days early |
| SSRN 2026 (HoKwang Kim) | 52 Binance unlocks, 2023–2025 | 46 of 52 (88.5%) negative, mean -16.97% | Within 72 hours |
Keyrock’s number is the big one: across more than 16,000 events, roughly 90% had a negative price effect, regardless of how big the unlock was. They also clocked that more than $600M in previously-locked tokens hit the market in a typical week — this is a constant, grinding supply faucet, not a rare event.
The 2026 SSRN study by HoKwang Kim (abstract 6632838, published April 2026) zoomed in on 52 Binance unlock events from 2023 through 2025 and found 88.5% turned negative within 72 hours, averaging a -16.97% return. Different sample, different method, same direction.
Two independent studies pointing the same way is about as close to “settled” as crypto gets. The base rate is bearish. Internalize that — and then notice the next section, which is where most people lose money even though they “knew” the unlock was coming.
8. ‘Already priced in’ — why the dump often happens 30 days before the date, not on it
This is the part that flips the whole panic instinct on its head: “already priced in.”
Remember the Keyrock detail that price weakness tends to start about 30 days before the unlock date? That’s not a coincidence. The unlock date is public. Everyone with a calendar can see it. So the people who plan to reduce risk don’t wait for the bell — they start trimming weeks early, and short-sellers pile in ahead of time. By the time the actual unlock lands, a chunk of the selling already happened.
Which leads to the cruel irony: if you wait until unlock day to panic-sell, there’s a real chance you’re selling near the local bottom — dumping right as the event that scared you is being absorbed and the worst is behind. The market front-ran you by a month.
This doesn’t mean unlocks are bullish. It means the timing of your reaction matters as much as the reaction itself. Selling the rumor and selling the news are different trades, and the unlock is usually the news.
9. Case study: how Arbitrum’s 1.1B-token ARB unlock actually played out
Theory’s nice; let’s look at one that actually happened. Arbitrum’s ARB unlock on March 16, 2024 is the textbook case, and it’s instructive precisely because it didn’t go the simple way.
The scale was brutal: roughly 1.1 billion ARB unlocked, worth about $1.24 billion at the time, swelling circulating supply by somewhere between 45% and 87% depending on how you count. By the size table above, that’s deep into “severe dilution” territory. This was also the first tranche of a four-year phased schedule releasing roughly every four weeks until 2027 — so not a one-and-done, but the opening shot of a long campaign.
What happened? Price slid about 21% by day 21 — ugly, right on script. But then it did something the doomers didn’t expect: it partially recovered roughly 19%, climbing back above the pre-unlock level by around day 25.
The ARB lesson isn’t “unlocks are fine.” It’s “even a textbook-bearish, severe-dilution unlock can chop, bottom, and bounce — so a reflex sell at the scariest moment is often the worst-timed trade in the sequence.”
10. Live right now: the final week of June 2026 and its $735M wave
This isn’t ancient history — it’s happening as you read this. The final week of June 2026 is carrying more than $735 million in unlocks, and a few names are doing the heavy lifting.
| Project | Ticker | The detail |
|---|---|---|
| MegaETH | MEGA | 250M tokens released 2026-06-23, ~$13.54M |
| Humanity | H | ~$54.77M, landing in the wake of an exploit |
| Sahara AI | SAHARA | Late-June supply test for a fresh AI token |
| Whole week | — | $735M+ across the board |
Notice what these have in common: they’re new and they’re thin. MEGA, H, and SAHARA are recent tokens with small floats, which is exactly the high-FDV / low-float setup from the FDV section. For young tokens like these, the early unlocks are an outsized share of circulating supply, and the market hasn’t built up the deep, patient demand that helps a mature coin absorb supply. That’s a tougher backdrop than an ARB-style large cap with years of liquidity behind it.
For perspective, this June wave isn’t even the year’s biggest — back in March 2026 something like $4.7B to $6B unlocked across 144 projects. Unlocks are a permanent feature of the calendar, not a one-time scare. The skill is reading each one, not bracing for all of them.
11. When an unlock doesn’t dump — the ~10% of cases and what offsets supply
Time for the honesty section, because “90% negative” can curdle into “always dump,” and that’s wrong. Around 10% of unlocks didn’t drop in Keyrock’s data, and the conditions that flip an unlock from bearish to neutral or better are knowable:
- It’s small. Under 1% of circulating supply, the market often shrugs it off entirely.
- It’s ecosystem or treasury. Remember the +1.18% average — those tokens usually get deployed, not dumped.
- It re-locks. Locked-staking and restaking recipients put tokens back into a lock; they never reach the order book.
- It’s already priced in. If the chart bled for a month into the date, the supply may already be absorbed.
- Demand is strong. Real buying — a listing, a buyback, genuine usage, a hot narrative — can soak up new supply without flinching.
- Investors hedge instead of dumping. VC tranches are often sold OTC or hedged with perps, so the spot impact is smaller than the headline.
And the deepest caveat of all: past patterns are not future guarantees. Those studies cover specific market regimes — particular liquidity conditions, particular narratives. A bull market with hungry buyers eats unlocks differently than a dead, illiquid tape. Use the base rate as a prior, not a prophecy.
12. Your decision framework: four questions instead of a reflex sell
So, the actual decision. Instead of reaching for the sell button, run these four questions. They’re built straight from the three numbers plus the “priced-in” check.
- How big, really? Under 1% of float → mostly ignore it. 5%+ → take it seriously. Pull the exact figure from the calendar; don’t eyeball it.
- Who’s getting it? Team or founder cliff → the worst case, stay alert. Ecosystem, treasury, or re-locked staking → much less to fear. Look up the allocation, don’t assume.
- Is it already in the price? Has the chart been weak for the last few weeks into a circled date? If yes, a lot of the selling may be done, and dumping now risks selling the bottom.
- What’s my actual timeframe? If you believe in this thing for two years, a single unlock is one wave in a long ocean. If you were already on the fence, the unlock is just the nudge — and that’s a conviction decision, not an unlock decision.
The whole point of a framework is to replace a reflex with a decision. The reflex sells the bottom. The decision at least gives you a reason you can defend tomorrow.
13. Hedging without selling your bag: perps, partial trims, and the tax event
What if your read is “yeah, this unlock looks genuinely risky” but you don’t want to sell your spot — maybe for conviction, maybe to avoid a taxable event? You’ve got middle-ground options.
- A partial trim. You don’t have to be all-in or all-out. Selling a quarter takes risk off the table while keeping your upside if the unlock turns out to be priced in. Most “should I sell?” questions have a “sell some” answer.
- A perp short as a hedge. If the token has a perpetual futures market, you can short an amount roughly matching your spot to neutralize the downside through the event, then close the short and keep your bag. This is the native unlock hedge for active traders — but perps carry leverage, liquidation, and funding-rate risk, so it’s not free and it’s not for beginners.
- Just hold and wait. Sometimes the right move is to do nothing, having decided the unlock is small, priced in, or irrelevant to your timeframe. “Hold” is a position too.
14. Where these tokens trade (and where they don’t yet) — spot, perps, and Binance Alpha
Where do these tokens actually live? It depends a lot on how mature the token is, and that changes how you’d hedge or trim.
Established large-caps — ARB and the like — trade everywhere: spot and perpetual futures across Binance, Bybit, OKX, Gate, KuCoin, and MEXC. Plenty of liquidity to trim into or hedge with perps.
Brand-new tokens are the tricky ones. Fresh names like MegaETH (MEGA), Humanity (H), and Sahara AI (SAHARA) often surface first as perps, or on Binance Alpha and fast-listing spot venues like MEXC and Gate, before they get broad spot listings. So the very tokens with the scariest early unlocks can also be the hardest to trade cleanly — thin books, wide spreads, perps-only in some cases.
Binance
Bybit
OKX
Gate.io
MEXC
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