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What is Stellar's XLM Token? Full Breakdown

chain

XLM is Stellar's native token. It pays every transaction fee, sits in every account, and powers a fast, low-cost payments network.

Crypto Rich

June 1, 2026

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$XLM, also called the lumen, is the native token of Stellar (@StellarOrg), an open-source blockchain built for fast, low-cost payments and currency transfers. It is the one asset on the network that every account must hold, and it pays for every transaction. 

Stellar was built to move money. XLM is the grease that keeps that machine turning.

Why does every Stellar account need XLM?

Stellar requires each account to hold a small amount of XLM at all times. This is the minimum balance, and it exists to stop spammers from clogging the ledger with junk accounts.

The base reserve is currently 0.5 XLM. A basic account needs two of those, so the floor is 1 XLM. Every extra feature an account adds, such as a trustline, an offer on the built-in exchange, or a data entry, reserves another 0.5 XLM. Close those features and the reserve frees up again.

XLM also pays network fees. The base fee is 100 stroops, or 0.00001 XLM, per operation. A stroop is one ten-millionth of a lumen. Those fees do two jobs:

  • They make flooding the ledger with traffic expensive.
  • They decide which transactions go first when traffic spikes, a system Stellar calls surge pricing.

Fees are not burned. They collect in a locked fee pool that no one, including the Stellar Development Foundation, can spend.

How does XLM's supply and tokenomics work?

Stellar launched in 2014 with 100 billion XLM created up front. There is no mining and no staking. Every XLM that will ever exist was made at the start.

For its first years, the protocol added 1 percent inflation each year. On October 28, 2019, validators voted to switch that off through the Protocol 12 upgrade. A week later, on November 4, 2019, the Stellar Development Foundation removed more than half the supply. It sent 55,442,095,285.7418 XLM to a locked address with no signers, putting them permanently out of reach.

That left a fixed supply of roughly 50 billion XLM. A few things follow from that:

  • The protocol mints nothing new. There is no mining, no staking rewards, and no inflation creating fresh XLM.
  • The total supply cannot grow, so XLM is not diluted the way an inflationary token is.
  • But "fixed total" is not the same as "fixed circulating." The foundation still holds close to one-third of the supply and releases it into the market over time, so the amount actually trading keeps rising even though no new XLM is created.

Who holds XLM, and how was it distributed?

At launch, the foundation received the full 100 billion XLM and was tasked with handing it out to get the network going. Early distribution included direct development spending, partnerships, seed investors such as Stripe, and several airdrops, including ones aimed at Bitcoin and XRP holders.

After the 2019 burn, the foundation kept the remaining XLM under a mandate requiring it to spend that XLM on building and promoting Stellar. Today around 33.6 billion XLM circulate in the open market, with the foundation holding the remainder. That circulating figure has climbed over the years as the foundation deploys its reserves into grants, ecosystem programs, and development, rather than releasing them all at once.

What is XLM actually used for?

XLM lives inside a payments network, so its uses point in that direction:

  • Cross-border payments and remittances. Transfers settle in seconds for a fraction of a cent. Regulated partners, called anchors, handle the cash on- and off-ramps at each end, so a sender and a receiver can each deal in their own local currency. MoneyGram is one of the larger names that has used Stellar for this.
  • Business and enterprise payments. Companies use the network for payroll, supplier invoices, treasury, and bulk payouts, often without pre-funding accounts.
  • Asset issuance and settlement. Other assets ride on Stellar too. USD Coin (USDC) is issued natively on the network and used there for dollar settlement, and XLM can act as a bridge currency between assets that do not trade directly against each other. In May 2026, DTCC, the central clearinghouse for U.S. securities, said it plans to connect its tokenized securities platform to Stellar, with custodied assets such as stocks, ETFs, and Treasuries targeted to go live in the first half of 2027.

The network settles around the clock, and any asset issued on Stellar, not just XLM, can move across it the same way.

Where can you buy and trade XLM?

XLM has traded on major centralized exchanges since shortly after launch, including Binance, Kraken, Coinbase, Bybit, and KuCoin, among others. It is also available through decentralized exchanges and wallets that support Stellar. Pairs usually cover major fiat currencies and stablecoins. For an up-to-date list of venues, exchange directories and the official Stellar site are the best places to check.

What makes XLM different from most crypto tokens?

The clearest way to read XLM is through the network's design. There is no mining to secure it and no staking yield to chase. The supply has been fixed since 2019, and the foundation that holds the largest share is bound to spend it on growth. Every account on Stellar must hold XLM, and every transaction is paid using it. XLM is not a feature bolted onto the network. It is the part that makes the network work.


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Disclaimer

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article do not necessarily represent the views of BSCN. The information provided in this article is for educational and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice, or advice of any kind. BSCN assumes no responsibility for any investment decisions made based on the information provided in this article. If you believe that the article should be amended, please reach out to the BSCN team by emailing [email protected].

Author

Crypto Rich profile photoCrypto Rich

Rich has been researching cryptocurrency and blockchain technology for eight years and has served as a senior analyst at BSCN since its founding in 2020. He focuses on fundamental analysis of early-stage crypto projects and tokens and has published in-depth research reports on over 200 emerging protocols. Rich also writes about broader technology and scientific trends and maintains active involvement in the crypto community through X/Twitter Spaces, and leading industry events.

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