Bitget will delist 22 spot trading pairs on April 30, 2026, removing the affected markets from its platform while keeping withdrawals for the underlying assets open until July 30, 2026.
Bitget Delisting Targets 22 Spot Trading Pairs on April 30, 2026
The exchange confirmed the move in an official support announcement, listing the full set of pairs scheduled for removal. Trading on all 22 pairs will cease once the delisting takes effect at the end of April.
The delisting covers spot trading pairs only. Bitget has not indicated any changes to futures, margin, or other product lines tied to the same underlying tokens.
Withdrawals Stay Open Until July 30, 2026
While spot trading for the 22 pairs ends on April 30, Bitget is giving users a three-month window to withdraw affected tokens. The withdrawal deadline is July 30, 2026.
The distinction between the two dates is critical. After April 30, users holding any of the delisted assets will no longer be able to sell them on Bitget's spot markets. After July 30, withdrawal access also closes, potentially leaving residual balances stranded.
Users with open orders on any of the 22 pairs should expect those orders to be automatically canceled at or before the delisting cutoff. Bitget's delisting notice outlines the procedural steps for affected accounts.
What the Delisting Means for Affected Bitget Users
Traders holding positions in any of the 22 spot pairs are the most directly impacted. The delisting removes liquidity from those markets on Bitget, which may already be thin given that low-volume pairs are the most common delisting targets.
Anyone with balances in the affected tokens should review their Bitget holdings before April 30 to decide whether to sell on the remaining spot market or withdraw to an external wallet. The July 30 withdrawal deadline provides a buffer, but acting earlier reduces the risk of missing the window.
Exchange delistings are routine maintenance events where periodic reviews of trading pair performance lead to the removal of markets that no longer meet volume or liquidity thresholds. Earlier this year, similar portfolio adjustments played out across the industry, including when Bitdeer reported selling its entire BTC position as part of its own treasury rebalancing.
For users holding smaller altcoin positions, this type of announcement is a reminder to periodically audit exchange balances. Tokens that remain on a platform past a withdrawal deadline can become inaccessible, a scenario that has also surfaced in discussions around frozen crypto holdings in other regulatory contexts.
The rapid pace of token launches has also put pressure on exchanges to manage listing quality. Stablecoin issuers like Tether have seen explosive growth in market cap, but many smaller tokens struggle to sustain the trading volumes needed to justify continued listing.
The key dates: April 30, 2026 for the end of spot trading on the 22 pairs, and July 30, 2026 for the final withdrawal cutoff.
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.