Understanding Finora Tokenomics
What Are Tokenomics?
Tokenomics — the economics of a token — determines the long-term viability and value of any digital currency. It covers supply, distribution, inflation, and utility. Here's everything you need to know about Finora's economic model.
Total Supply
Finora has a fixed maximum supply of 100 billion FN coins. No more coins can ever be created beyond this limit. This hard cap ensures scarcity and protects against inflation.
Distribution Breakdown
- 70% — Mining Rewards: The vast majority of coins go directly to the community through mining. This is distributed over the entire mining phase, with halving events reducing the rate over time.
- 15% — Development Fund: Reserved for platform development, security audits, infrastructure, and operational costs.
- 10% — Community Treasury: Governed by the Community DAO for grants, partnerships, and ecosystem growth initiatives.
- 5% — Founding Team: Team allocation with a 3-year vesting schedule and 1-year cliff. The team cannot dump tokens.
Halving Schedule
Mining rates halve at key user milestones to control inflation:
- 100K users: First halving
- 500K users: Second halving
- 2M users: Third halving
- 10M users: Final halving
Early miners benefit from higher mining rates, creating a natural incentive for early adoption. As the network grows, scarcity increases and each coin becomes harder to mine.
Utility
FN coins are designed for real-world use:
- Peer-to-peer payments and transfers
- Merchant payments (UPI integration planned for India)
- dApp ecosystem transactions
- Governance voting in the Community DAO
- Staking and yield (post-Mainnet)
We don't just want FN to have value — we want it to have utility. A coin people actually use every day.