What’s the Real Difference?
In 2025, the line between fungible tokens (FTs) and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) is blurring—but their core roles remain distinct. Let’s decode their evolution and why it matters.
Fungible Tokens: The Workhorses of Crypto
Fungible tokens are interchangeable, like cash. A Bitcoin or BNB you own is identical to another. In 2025, FTs dominate DeFi, payments, and governance:
Stablecoins (USDT, USDC) now back 60% of global remittances, per IMF data.
CBDCs like the digital euro and China’s e-CNY use FT frameworks for traceability.
New Risks: MiCA regulations require FTs to disclose reserves, but privacy coins face bans in the EU.
NFTs: Beyond JPEGs
NFTs are unique digital deeds. While 2021’s hype focused on art, 2025’s NFTs are utility-first:
Real-World Assets: Tokenized real estate (up 300% YoY) and carbon credits trade as NFTs on Ethereum and Solana.
Identity & Access: Singapore’s digital IDs and Coachella’s 2025 tickets are NFT-based.
Criticism: Critics call NFTs “overengineered” for simple ownership proofs.
The Convergence Debate
Hybrid Tokens: Projects like Solana’s “Compressed NFTs” merge FT liquidity with NFT uniqueness (e.g., concert tickets resold fractionally).
Regulatory Tension: The SEC treats some NFTs as securities, while the EU exempts small-scale creators.
Tech Wars: Bitcoin Ordinals challenge Ethereum’s NFT dominance, sparking miner fee disputes.
**Which Wins**
FTs underpin finance, but NFTs redefine ownership. The future likely hinges on interoperability—imagine NFTs that split into FTs for trading, then reunite for utility.
Are NFTs still relevant, or just a stepping stone to tokenized everything? Share your take!