Lockup
A lockup is a predefined period during which tokens cannot be transferred, traded, or sold. It is commonly used in: Initial Coin Offerings (ICOs), Private sales or venture rounds, Team token allocations and Staking or vesting programs. Lockups are typically enforced through smart contracts, ensuring that even the wallet holder can’t access the locked funds prematurely.
Why Are Lockups Used?
Lockups serve multiple strategic purposes:
- Prevent price crashes:
By limiting the ability of insiders or early investors to sell immediately after launch, lockups reduce the risk of sudden token dumps. - Build trust:
Lockups show that project teams and investors are committed for the long term. - Manage supply:
By delaying token circulation, lockups help stabilize supply dynamics in the early days of a project. - Encourage long-term holding:
Some lockups come with rewards or incentives for users who keep their tokens locked.
They are often part of a broader vesting schedule.
Common Types of Lockups
1.) Team and Advisor Lockups
- Tokens allocated to project members are locked for 6–48 months.
- Often released in stages (e.g. 25% every 6 months).
2.) Investor Lockups
- Early backers (e.g. seed or private round) agree to not sell for a set period.
- Prevents massive profit-taking at launch.
3.) Staking Lockups
- Tokens staked in Proof-of-Stake protocols are often locked for a period (e.g. 7–28 days) before they can be withdrawn.
4.) Liquidity Lockups
- In DeFi, liquidity providers may lock tokens to earn yield, or projects lock liquidity to build trust.
Risks and Criticisms
- Unlock events can create price volatility, especially if large token amounts hit the market.
- Lack of transparency around lockup conditions can hurt investor confidence.
- Centralization risk if lockup schedules favor insiders.
- Smart contract vulnerabilities could allow lockup circumvention if poorly coded.
That’s why reputable projects publish transparent lockup and vesting schedules — often visible in tokenomics sections or on block explorers.
How to Check for Lockups
Investors should always ask:
- How many tokens are currently circulating?
- When and how many tokens will unlock in the future?
- Who holds the locked tokens?
- Are the lockups enforced via smart contracts?
Resources like TokenUnlocks, Messari, or project whitepapers often publish detailed lockup schedules.
Final Thoughts
Lockups are a critical mechanism in crypto for protecting token value, aligning incentives, and ensuring long-term commitment. While they can create temporary illiquidity, they also shield new projects from early instability and hype-driven dumping. As an investor, understanding lockups helps you evaluate true token supply, anticipate unlock risks, and make smarter, better-informed decisions.
