Exchanges typically require a project to have a fully operational blockchain before listing.

2. Regulatory Compliance & Transparency Issues

Binance and other major exchanges require detailed compliance documentation, including team identity verification, regulatory approvals, and clear tokenomics.

Pi Network’s team structure, decentralization level, and financial transparency have been questioned by some in the crypto community.

3. Lack of Smart Contract & Open-Source Code

Many listed projects provide open-source smart contracts and clear technical documentation.

Pi Network has not yet made all of its blockchain and code publicly available for full verification.

4. No Official Exchange Partnership from Pi Core Team

The Pi Core Team (PCT) has explicitly stated that any exchange listing before the Open Mainnet is unauthorized.

Any current Pi trading on exchanges (such as IOUs) is speculative and unofficial.

5. Listing Requirements & Trading Volume Expectations

Binance requires a significant amount of liquidity, active trading volume, and real-world use cases before listing new tokens.

Since Pi transactions are still within the Pi Network ecosystem, there's no established global trading volume to support a Binance listing.

What to Post on Binance Square?

If you're posting on Binance Square, you can ask:

"What are the key listing requirements for Pi Network to be added to Binance?"

"Would Binance consider listing Pi once Open Mainnet launches?"

"How can Pi holders ensure a smooth transition to Open Mainnet for exchange listing?"

#PiCoreTeam #Binance