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Documentation Index

Fetch the complete documentation index at: https://docs.binibit.com/llms.txt

Use this file to discover all available pages before exploring further.

Canonical conditions on Binibit Exchange

This page describes mechanics. Live values (thresholds, percentages) are on the staking conditions page.

The nine levels

Stakers automatically participate in a 9-level referral system, R0 through R8. Each level has thresholds for:
  • Self-stake (in USDT-equivalent)
  • Number of qualifying direct referrals
  • Cumulative team volume
LevelTier description
R0Entry tier (any active stake)
R1Active builder
R2Active builder
R3Mid-tier
R4Mid-tier
R5Senior
R6Senior
R7Top tier
R8Maximum tier
Specific thresholds and percentages: see staking conditions. Live values may change with BINI price (see Dynamic threshold below).

How commission works

When a downline (a user in your referral team, direct or indirect) earns staking rewards, you receive a commission based on the level difference between you and them.
If downline level >= your level:    base commission rate
If downline level <  your level:    higher commission per level gap
This rewards being one or more tiers above your team. Unlike flat referral systems, the level-difference design encourages you to keep growing — your team’s rewards multiply for you only as long as you stay ahead.

Example (illustrative)

You are R5. A user in your downline is R3.
Difference: 2 levels.
Commission on their staking rewards: base + 2 × per-level-bonus
(Exact percentages on the canonical conditions page.)

Same-level commission

If your downline reaches your level or higher, the commission falls to a flat 15% (or the published base rate). This is the floor — even if your downline outranks you, you still earn from their stakes, just at a lower rate.

Dynamic threshold

Level thresholds are denominated in USDT, not BINI. As BINI price moves, the BINI required to maintain a given level moves inversely:
required_bini = required_usdt / current_bini_price
BINI priceBINI required for hypothetical R5 (e.g. $5,000 USDT)
$0.1050,000 BINI
$0.12 (reference)41,667 BINI
$0.2025,000 BINI
$0.5010,000 BINI
If BINI rises, you need less BINI to maintain your level. If BINI falls, you need more (or risk dropping a tier). This protects the level system against price volatility — your level reflects USD-equivalent commitment, not raw BINI quantity.

Maintaining your level

Your level is checked at stake initiation and on periodic rebalancing:
  • If your self-stake (in USDT-equivalent) drops below your level’s threshold, you fall a level
  • If your team volume drops below your level’s threshold, you fall a level
  • New stakes or team additions can raise your level
Specific check intervals are on the staking conditions page.

Combined with R0-R8 — examples

The combination of self-stake and team volume creates a diagonal progression:
You can reach R5 by:
  - Higher self-stake + smaller team
  OR
  - Smaller self-stake + larger team

Both paths viable.
This makes the system accessible to both whales (large self-stake) and community builders (large team).

Tokenomics impact

The R0-R8 system is what makes staking compounding for the protocol:
  • Stakers lock BINI (sink #2)
  • Stakers acquire team to earn more → users referred deposit more BINI → more locks
  • Higher levels = larger team = more aggregate locked BINI per refer-er
  • The system has a natural cap (R8) so it cannot run away
See Tokenomics: Staking & Referral Economics.

Risk considerations

  • Multi-level marketing structure: legality varies by jurisdiction. Verify you can participate in your country before signing up.
  • Downline volatility: if your team unstakes en-masse, your commissions drop and you may lose your level
  • Threshold volatility: USDT-pegged thresholds protect against BINI price moves but don’t protect against USDT depegging (rare but not zero)

Staking

160% APR packages — what referrers earn from

Tokenomics: Staking

Full economic context

Where to buy

Need BINI first to stake

Staking conditions

Canonical thresholds and percentages