Binance Margin to Remove Select Trading Pairs, Including AAVE/ETH
Binance Margin will remove select trading pairs, including AAVE/ETH, in a move that narrows leveraged trading options for users holding positions on those markets. The change applies specifically to Binance’s margin product and does not represent a broader delisting of the affected tokens.
What Binance Margin Is Removing and What Is Confirmed So Far
The confirmed scope of this action is Binance Margin, not Binance as a whole. AAVE/ETH is explicitly named as one of the affected pairs, but the phrase “select trading pairs” signals that additional pairs beyond AAVE/ETH are included in the removal.
A report from Phemex indicates Binance plans to delist 19 margin trading pairs on April 24. This is a margin-market operational change, not a token-wide delisting or withdrawal suspension for any of the underlying assets.
Traders should note that the wording points to a routine exchange maintenance action. Binance periodically reviews margin pair liquidity and risk parameters, removing pairs that no longer meet internal thresholds.
Why the AAVE/ETH Pair Removal Matters for Margin Traders
AAVE/ETH is a DeFi-native trading pair that lets margin traders take leveraged positions on AAVE priced against ETH rather than against a stablecoin. Losing this pair eliminates one avenue for traders who want direct altcoin-versus-ETH exposure with borrowed funds.
A margin pair removal affects how users open, maintain, and unwind leveraged positions on that specific market. Anyone with an open AAVE/ETH margin position, pending limit orders, or borrowed assets tied to that pair will need to act before the cutoff date.
This is distinct from a negative development for AAVE as a project. The AAVE protocol continues to operate independently of exchange-level trading pair decisions, and similar operational changes at centralized exchanges have occurred alongside developments like institutions exploring token issuance on Ethereum and Solana.
What Binance Users Should Check Before the Removal Takes Effect
Traders with exposure to the affected pairs should verify the exact cutoff date and time in Binance’s official notice. The announcement circulated by Wu Blockchain on X provides an initial reference point, but users should confirm details directly through Binance’s announcement page.
A practical checklist for affected users includes the following steps:
- Close or reduce open margin positions on the affected pairs before the deadline to avoid forced liquidation or automatic settlement.
- Cancel pending orders tied to any of the removed pairs, as unfilled orders will likely be canceled automatically at the cutoff.
- Repay borrowed assets associated with the pair if using isolated margin, to avoid unexpected interest charges or collateral adjustments.
- Confirm whether isolated margin, cross margin, or both are affected, as the implications differ for each product type.
These steps apply specifically to margin trading. Spot holdings and withdrawal access for AAVE and ETH are separate services and are not implicated by a margin pair removal. Traders who experienced disruptions during events like Kamino’s suspension of LayerZero asset interactions will recognize the importance of acting before a cutoff rather than after.
Does This Affect AAVE or ETH Trading Outside Margin?
A margin pair removal is not the same as removing AAVE or ETH from Binance entirely. Users can still trade AAVE and ETH on spot markets, and futures contracts for these assets operate on a separate product line.
Margin trading is one of several product tiers on Binance. Spot trading lets users buy and sell without leverage. Futures trading offers leveraged exposure through perpetual or dated contracts. Margin trading sits between the two, allowing users to borrow funds against collateral for spot-like trades with leverage.
Removing AAVE/ETH from margin does not affect AAVE/USDT, ETH/USDT, or any other pair involving these tokens unless those pairs are also named in the full removal list. The broader exchange ecosystem, including recent moves such as Payward’s reported acquisition of Bitnomial, continues to evolve independently of individual pair-level decisions.
What to Watch for in the Full Pair-Removal Notice
The headline alone does not provide the complete list of all 19 affected trading pairs. Traders should monitor Binance’s official announcements page for the full list, which will clarify whether other commonly traded margin pairs are included.
Key details still needed from the official notice include the exact UTC deadline for the removal, Binance’s stated reason for selecting these specific pairs, and whether any related services such as margin API endpoints or trading bot integrations will be affected.
Users running automated strategies through Binance’s margin API should test whether their systems handle pair removal gracefully, as API calls referencing delisted pairs will return errors after the cutoff. Confirming these operational details before April 24 will help traders avoid disruptions.
Additional source references: source document 1.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.








