Aptos Community Votes to Lock APT Supply at 2.1 Billion in Landmark Proposal
TL;DR
Aptos token holders voted to cap the total supply at 2.1 billion.
Staking rewards will decrease while transaction fees will increase.
A portion of fees will fund token buybacks and permanent removal.
Those who hold Aptos tokens and participate in its governance system made a decision that redefines the maximum number of coins that will ever exist. The measure establishes that there will never be more than 2.1 billion APT tokens in circulation.
Before this vote, which closed on March 1, there was no defined ceiling for the issuance of new tokens. The previous model allowed for the continuous creation of coins without a preset limit. With the approved change, once the total number of tokens in circulation reaches that figure, the network will stop generating new units.
The vote showed majority support among those who cast ballots. According to official Aptos governance records, 335.2 million APT tokens were used to support the proposal. Only 1,500 tokens were cast against it. Participation reached 39% of total eligible voting power, exceeding the 35% minimum required for the vote to be valid.
The proposal now moves to its implementation phase. The Aptos Foundation, the entity driving the development of this network, will be responsible for executing the necessary technical changes.
The limit on total supply is only one part of the approved changes
The new scheme also modifies how participants who help secure the network are rewarded and how transaction fees are calculated. Rewards for staking tokens will be reduced. This system pays users who lock up their coins to help validate transactions. At the same time, the fees users pay to process transactions will increase.
A portion of those fees will be used to buy APT tokens on the open market. Those purchased tokens will be permanently removed from circulation. This process, known in the industry as token burning, reduces the total available supply over time.
For a token holder, the combined effect of these measures is straightforward. There will be a maximum number of coins that will never be exceeded. And if the network is used frequently, the fees burned will further reduce the circulating supply.
The vote occurred at a time when the price of APT showed weakness
Data from Tradingview indicates the token reached $0.79 on February 23. That value represented the lowest point in recent trading sessions. Compared to prices from a year ago, APT had lost more than 85% of its value at that time.
In the days following the vote, the token showed some recovery. APT rose 17% in the seven days leading up to March 8. At the time of this publication, APT is trading near $0.96, an increase of 3.5% in the last 24 hours. This uptick coincides with a general upward movement in the cryptocurrency market.
The market tends to pay attention to changes in a token’s supply structure. A fixed cap, combined with the periodic burning of coins, eliminates the possibility that continuous issuance will dilute the value of existing holdings. For those maintaining long-term positions, this provides certainty about how many tokens will exist in the future.
The question now facing the market is whether network usage will be sufficient for fee burning to have a visible effect on circulating supply. If transaction activity grows, so will the number of tokens removed from circulation. If not, the hard cap will be the only active mechanism.
Filed under: News - @ March 2, 2026 10:27 pm