Which US stocks can you buy as tokens? The current bStocks list and how it keeps growing
"Can I buy Tesla? What about NVIDIA? Is Apple on there?" These are the most common questions in our inbox. The answer: bStocks did not move the entire US stock market on-chain; it goes curated first batch, then expand slowly. So this piece does one job: lay out clearly the few you can buy now, tell you who each one is, and explain how to keep an eye on the new ones coming later.
One thing to flag up front: I never write prices in stone. Tokenized US stock prices move in real time with the underlying stock, so any specific figure in any article is out of date the moment it is published. To check a price, go straight to the token's page on Binance and trust what is shown there.
The list first: the launch batch
When Binance launched bStocks in June 2026, the first batch looked like this (ticker, matching company, and rough profile in one go):
| Ticker | Company / underlying | Rough profile | Current price |
|---|---|---|---|
| TSLAB | Tesla | EV / tech bellwether | Per Binance page |
| NVDAB | NVIDIA | AI chip leader | Per Binance page |
| CRCLB | Circle | Stablecoin issuer, crypto-linked stock | Per Binance page |
| MUB | Micron | Memory chips | Per Binance page |
| SNDKB | SanDisk | Storage / flash memory | Per Binance page |
| SPCXB | SpaceX (pending listing) | Aerospace, not yet publicly listed | After it lists |
You can see the selection logic: lead with names that are big, talked-about, and tech or crypto adjacent, easy for new users to recognize and likely to draw trading interest. It is the same idea as a store stocking its bestsellers first. The launch batch does not aim to be complete; it aims to let people who walk in spot a name they recognize and feel willing to place a first order. To confirm the current state of this table, go by the current Binance page. As for how to place an order in the Spot section, see step by step: buy bStocks.
The few above reflect the June 2026 first batch. Which assets are buyable, whether they are still trading, and their prices all change; this list was checked in June 2026, so before buying go by the current list and token pages inside the Binance app.
Reading the tickers: why they all carry a B
You have probably noticed these tickers all have one more B than the underlying stock: Tesla's underlying is TSLA, and tokenized it is TSLAB; NVIDIA's NVDA maps to NVDAB, and so on.
That B basically stands for the bStocks / Binance track, helping you tell it apart at a glance from the underlying ticker and from other platforms' stock tokens. For ones like MUB (Micron, underlying MU) and SNDKB (SanDisk, underlying SNDK), remember the rule of underlying ticker plus B and you can usually match them up. When you see a US stock ticker with a B on it, first ask yourself whether it is bStocks.
One aside: precisely because the tickers look alike and the pattern is easy to guess, there is plenty of room for fakes and mix-ups, which is exactly why the next section is dedicated to confirming the real one. Learn the rule, but do not place an order on the rule alone.
Keep the shorthand in mind: underlying ticker plus B is very likely the tokenized version on the bStocks track.
One by one: who each of them is
For readers who are not familiar with US stocks, a line of background so you know what company you are buying:
- TSLAB (Tesla): an EV and energy company, extremely well known among retail, and very volatile too, one of the most popular names in the first batch. To see what "buy Tesla for 5 dollars" is about, read buy Tesla for 5 dollars?
- NVDAB (NVIDIA): the core supplier of AI chips, one of the most-watched companies of this AI wave.
- CRCLB (Circle): the issuer of the USDC stablecoin, arguably the US stock the crypto crowd knows best, the closest fit to on-chain users' awareness.
- MUB (Micron): a major maker of memory and storage chips, fairly cyclical.
- SNDKB (SanDisk): flash and storage, in the same storage track as Micron.
Do not buy on name recognition alone. Tokenized US stocks are a high-risk product, these underlying stocks are quite volatile in their own right, and on top of that come on-chain depeg and issuer risks, so be sure to read are tokenized US stocks safe first. This site is for education and information only and is not investment advice.
In the first few days after launch, we used a small account to search every name in the first batch in the Spot section, confirmed the tickers matched the right companies with no mix-ups, and bought a little TSLAB to test a withdrawal: pick BNB Chain as the network, it arrived in minutes, gas was tiny. A small tip: searching the ticker with the B (say TSLAB) is fastest; searching "Tesla" alone sometimes surfaces other products first. Double-check the company name on the token page before ordering so you do not buy the wrong track.
SPCXB: why SpaceX is not here yet
A lot of people have their eye on SPCXB (SpaceX), since it is one of the few star companies ordinary people normally cannot buy at all. But there is a reason it is marked "pending listing" on the list: SpaceX is not publicly listed yet, there is no publicly traded underlying stock, so a 1:1 backed tokenized stock has nothing underneath it to custody.
So SPCXB is more of a placeholder; it can only truly go live once SpaceX actually lists publicly and there is a real share that can be custodied. Until then, be highly wary of any channel claiming you can buy a SpaceX token right now, as it is very likely not a proper 1:1 backed product. For a deeper look at the situation and outlook, read SPCXB: will a SpaceX tokenized stock arrive.
How to confirm you bought the real bStocks
There is a safety issue worth pulling out on its own: when you see a token with a US stock name, how do you confirm it is the Binance 1:1 backed bStocks and not a same-name knockoff someone slapped together? This is far too common on-chain; anyone can issue a token called "TSLAB" and ride the name to trick you into buying.
A few checks: first, trust the entry point. Only what you find in the Binance app Spot section and listed by Binance is the bStocks track; do not grab it from a link of unknown origin or a chat group. Second, cross-check the name and description. Open the token page and see whether it spells out 1:1 real-share backing and the issuance and custody arrangement; a proper product makes these clear. Third, be wary of "you can buy SpaceX right now" pitches. As noted above, SPCXB is not live yet, so anything claiming you can buy it is basically a problem.
Same-name tokens can be issued anywhere on-chain. Trust the official Binance entry, cross-check the backing description on the token page, and do not grab from unfamiliar links or communities. Buy a knockoff and the 1:1 backing protection has nothing to do with you.
How the list will grow, and where to see the latest
bStocks' approach is curate first, then expand step by step, and it will most likely add more popular tech stocks and ETFs later. From the few in the first batch (tech bellwethers + crypto-linked + storage chips), you can tell it leans toward leading with names that are well known, draw trading interest, and fit on-chain users' awareness. But exactly which ones list and when is up to Binance alone; no one can promise it for them.
To track the latest list, the two most reliable moves are: one, look directly at the tokenized stock section inside the Binance app, the only real-time source of truth, where new listings and changes to existing ones are all decided; two, come back to this site, and we will update this piece when the list changes noticeably. Do not place orders off a six-month-old article; the assets and prices have long since moved. To compare other platforms' asset counts side by side, see bStocks vs xStocks; to understand the thing itself first, go back to what are tokenized US stocks; and when you are ready to buy, see how to fund your Binance account.
*20% spot trading fee discount; the actual rate is whatever the Binance page shows and may change with policy.
To check official information, see Binance's own Binance and the BNB Chain blog.