FindCoin / Features / Coin tracker
Live tracking for 17,000+ coins — and the on-chain long tail
Prices, market caps, volume, supply and history for every coin that matters — refreshed every minute, aggregated from hundreds of exchanges and on-chain pools, and presented with the one thing raw numbers always lack: context.
What "tracking a coin" actually means
A cryptocurrency does not have a price. Bitcoin trades on hundreds of exchanges at once, each with its own order book, its own buyers and sellers, and its own slightly different number at any given second. A coin tracker solves this by aggregating trades across exchanges into a volume-weighted price — the figure that best represents what the market as a whole is paying right now — and pairing it with the metrics that give that price meaning: market capitalization, 24-hour volume, circulating supply and historical extremes.
A token tracker goes one level deeper. Beyond the few hundred coins that centralized exchanges list, there are hundreds of thousands of tokens that trade only on-chain, in liquidity pools on decentralized exchanges. Their prices aren't published by any company; they're implied by the ratio of assets sitting in a pool, and they change with every swap. FindCoin reads both layers — the exchange-listed market for perspective, and the on-chain frontier where new projects (and new scams) are born — so your view of the market has no blind spot.
Data that stays fresh — every 60 seconds
Crypto prices move around the clock, so a tracker is only as useful as its refresh cycle. FindCoin's tables update automatically every 60 seconds while a page is open — prices, percentage changes, market caps and volume, plus a 7-day sparkline for each coin so a single glance tells you whether today's number sits in an uptrend, a downtrend, or noise. On full coin pages, live figures sit above longer interactive charts (24 hours to one year), and every chart point shows its exact timestamp and price on hover.
Just as important is what happens when data sources hiccup. Public market APIs rate-limit and occasionally go down; a naive site shows you a broken page. FindCoin's servers cache every figure and fall back to the last known good value, clearly timestamped — so a temporary outage upstream never becomes a blank screen for you.
The seven numbers on every coin page — and what each one tells you
Raw data becomes insight only when you know what each metric is for. Every FindCoin coin page leads with these seven, in this order of importance:
| Metric | What it tells you |
|---|---|
| Price | The volume-weighted market price — the headline, but the least meaningful number on its own. |
| Market cap | Price × circulating supply: the market's total valuation, and the honest way to compare coins ("cheap" $0.0001 tokens can be worth more than $100 coins). |
| Volume 24h | How much actually traded. Healthy coins turn over meaningful volume relative to market cap; tiny volume means any price can be an illusion. |
| Circulating supply | How many coins exist and trade today — the denominator behind every "is this cheap?" question. |
| Max supply / FDV | How many coins will ever exist, and what the project is worth if they all circulate. A low market cap with a huge FDV means heavy future dilution. |
| ATH / ATL | All-time high and low with dates — the coin's full range of market opinion, and how far today's price sits from euphoria and despair. |
| Supply progress | Our visual bar of circulating vs. maximum supply — one glance shows whether emissions are nearly done or barely started. |
History is a feature, not decoration
The distance between today's price and a coin's all-time high is one of the most quietly useful numbers in crypto. It tells you what the market once believed this project could be worth, and how much of that belief has evaporated. A coin 95% below its ATH is a fundamentally different proposition from one 15% below it — regardless of which price "looks cheaper."
FindCoin puts ATH and ATL front and center on every coin page, with dates and percentage distances, alongside 7-day, 30-day and 1-year performance. The goal is simple: whenever you look at a price, you should also see where that price has been.
No account. No wallet connection. Ever.
Many crypto tools ask you to "connect your wallet" for features that don't need one — and wallet-drainer scams disguised as legitimate dashboards are now one of the most common ways people lose funds. FindCoin's position is deliberately old-fashioned: a market data site has no business touching your wallet.
Everything on FindCoin works without registration, without email, and without a single wallet permission. That is not a missing feature — it is a security guarantee. A tracker that never requests wallet access can never be tricked, hacked or sold into draining one. When a site that only shows prices asks for a wallet signature, close the tab.
A simple workflow that professionals actually use
Scan the board
Trending coins show where attention is flowing; the market cap table shows where the money already is. Divergence between the two is where stories start.
Open the coin page
Check volume against market cap, supply against max supply, and distance from ATH. Thirty seconds here filters out most bad ideas.
Scan before you buy
For anything outside the top 100, run the contract through the scam checker — every coin page links its contracts directly to a scan.
Tracking the long tail — where trackers usually go blind
The big market data sites are excellent at the top 500 coins and increasingly hollow below them: thin data, missing new launches, and no risk signal at all. But the long tail is where most crypto activity — and most crypto damage — actually happens. Thousands of tokens launch daily; a handful become significant; many are traps.
FindCoin treats the long tail as a first-class citizen. Our new-listings radar surfaces tokens minutes after their first liquidity pool exists, with the three numbers that matter at launch: age, liquidity and volume. And because the youngest tokens carry the highest risk, every listing sits one click from a full scam report. Tracking without risk context is how people get hurt; we don't separate the two.
One honest limitation worth stating: extremely new tokens can take a few minutes to appear in indexers, and prices for micro-liquidity pools are inherently noisy — a $500 pool's "price" can move 40% on one trade. We show liquidity next to every young token precisely so you can judge how much to trust its price.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a coin tracker and a token tracker?
How often does FindCoin update prices?
Do I need an account or a wallet to use the tracker?
Is the FindCoin coin tracker really free?
Start tracking now
Trending coins, the top-100 table and the new-listings radar are live on the homepage — no sign-up.
Open the live tracker →