Meme coins
A list of the best-known meme cryptocurrencies by market capitalisation
Meme coins are cryptocurrencies that grew up around internet memes and communities — from Dogecoin to Shiba Inu and Pepe. They usually serve no real technological purpose; their price is driven mainly by popularity, community and speculation, which makes them one of the riskiest and most volatile corners of the market. Below you will find a list of the leading meme coins by market capitalisation, with the current price and both the 24-hour and 7-day change.
Meme coin ranking
The table ranks meme coins by market capitalisation — the big names such as Dogecoin, Shiba Inu and Pepe at the top, smaller and even riskier tokens below. For each one you will find the price and how it has performed over a day, a week and a year. Expand the rest of the list beneath the table.
Don’t invest unless you’re prepared to lose all the money you invest. This is a high-risk investment and you should not expect to be protected if something goes wrong. Understand the risks.
| # | Coin | Price | 24h | 7d | 1 year | Market cap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | | $0.0728 | 1.96% | 0.50% | 57.64% | $11.28bn |
| 2 | | $0.00000429 | 2.73% | 0.17% | 64.09% | $2.53bn |
| 3 | | $1.18 | 15.75% | 2.93% | 411.55% | $1.56bn |
| 4 | | $0.00000262 | 2.11% | 10.90% | 74.29% | $1.10bn |
| 5 | | $0.6987 | 0.45% | 0.34% | — | $698.72m |
| 6 | | $0.00151657 | 1.84% | 1.15% | — | $610.65m |
| 7 | | $0.00621095 | 1.52% | 0.34% | 57.85% | $390.42m |
| 8 | | $1.61 | 2.14% | 4.18% | 81.41% | $382.17m |
| 9 | | $46.88 | 22.12% | 24.26% | 711.76% | $380.39m |
| 10 | | $0.00000402 | 1.13% | 5.46% | 81.47% | $353.55m |
| 11 | | $0.3736 | 0.30% | 1.94% | 73.65% | $347.85m |
| 12 | | $0.1056 | 12.19% | 12.53% | — | $316.73m |
| 13 | | $0.2608 | 0.16% | 0.97% | — | $260.35m |
| 14 | | $0.00073607 | — | 0.00% | — | $228.18m |
| 15 | | $0.00002294 | 3.12% | 4.79% | 75.10% | $221.35m |
| 16 | | $0.00190517 | 0.25% | 0.16% | — | $218.33m |
| 17 | | $0.1934 | 1.20% | 0.39% | — | $193.41m |
| 18 | | $0.00000091 | 0.65% | 8.86% | 40.04% | $190.78m |
| 19 | | $0.1594 | 2.31% | 6.48% | 81.29% | $159.19m |
| 20 | | $0.1507 | 1.80% | 35.67% | 58.41% | $150.70m |
| 21 | | $0.1457 | 1.45% | 3.86% | 86.17% | $145.65m |
| 22 | | $0.00000071 | 10.19% | 9.70% | 3.91% | $142.88m |
| 23 | | $0.00125427 | 2.72% | 10.55% | — | $125.43m |
| 24 | | $0.2987 | 4.34% | 81.00% | — | $124.11m |
| 25 | | $0.1207 | 71.61% | 107.70% | — | $120.75m |
| 26 | | $0.0320 | 154.02% | 162.31% | — | $110.24m |
| 27 | | $0.1048 | 2.08% | 1.49% | 34.87% | $104.75m |
| 28 | | $0.3652 | 123.94% | 995.93% | — | $103.77m |
| 29 | | $0.1001 | 3.01% | 72.83% | 479.05% | $102.11m |
| 30 | | $0.1018 | 12.15% | 45.98% | 85.97% | $101.77m |
| 31 | | $0.00000024 | 13.06% | 13.04% | 63.74% | $101.16m |
| 32 | | $0.1003 | 6.22% | — | — | $101.06m |
| 33 | | $0.1001 | 9.09% | 20.69% | 29.72% | $100.98m |
| 34 | | $0.0998 | 12.83% | 21.59% | — | $100.60m |
| 35 | | $0.00095577 | 20.92% | 181.91% | — | $100.42m |
| 36 | | $0.1563 | 0.09% | 35.98% | — | $100.24m |
| 37 | | $0.0992 | 8.92% | 7.28% | 64.22% | $99.91m |
| 38 | | $0.0995 | 8.16% | 12.13% | 281.44% | $99.60m |
| 39 | | $96.94 | 7.86% | 10.34% | — | $99.59m |
| 40 | | $0.0996 | 31.43% | — | — | $99.58m |
| 41 | | $0.0997 | 8.54% | 33.59% | 51.09% | $99.55m |
| 42 | | $0.0992 | 14.15% | 25.37% | 80.70% | $99.44m |
| 43 | | $0.1029 | 7.61% | 1.19% | 73.85% | $99.44m |
| 44 | | $0.00132522 | 12.47% | 12.06% | 79.17% | $99.40m |
| 45 | | $0.00111292 | 10.96% | 9.64% | 82.69% | $99.38m |
| 46 | | $0.1364 | 65.62% | 84.68% | 7.89% | $99.37m |
| 47 | | $0.00000024 | 0.52% | 24.16% | 118.78% | $99.36m |
| 48 | | $0.0101 | 3.40% | 20.50% | 87.44% | $99.36m |
| 49 | | $0.00023415 | 7.91% | 13.57% | 43.14% | $99.30m |
| 50 | | $8.02 | 4.71% | 0.23% | 713.52% | $99.30m |
| 51 | | $0.00000000 | 6.30% | 7.02% | 72.37% | $99.27m |
| 52 | | $0.1001 | 9.53% | 100,930,066.56% | — | $99.25m |
| 53 | | $0.0123 | 7.52% | 6.18% | 44.65% | $99.21m |
| 54 | | $0.00143469 | 11.89% | 8.59% | 75.51% | $99.19m |
| 55 | | $0.3466 | 50.09% | — | — | $99.17m |
| 56 | | $0.00321385 | 2.92% | 8.70% | 66.39% | $99.13m |
| 57 | | $0.1012 | 5.58% | 4.55% | 81.46% | $99.13m |
| 58 | | $0.00000014 | 37.85% | 14.67% | — | $99.12m |
| 59 | | $0.00989578 | 6.37% | 1.35% | 73.25% | $99.12m |
| 60 | | $4.72 | 3.64% | 8.67% | 59.27% | $99.07m |
| 61 | | $0.00000025 | 0.45% | 16.42% | 84.52% | $99.07m |
| 62 | | $0.00000049 | 2.84% | 3.98% | 64.24% | $99.07m |
| 63 | | $0.9905 | 1.82% | 0.22% | 73.87% | $99.04m |
| 64 | | $0.00023544 | 13.19% | 26.74% | 236,037.08% | $99.03m |
| 65 | | $0.0990 | 7.37% | 24.32% | 66.19% | $99.02m |
| 66 | | $0.00099013 | 2.44% | 8.25% | 65.09% | $99.01m |
What are meme coins?
Meme coins (meme cryptocurrencies) are tokens inspired by internet memes, jokes or pop culture. The first and best known is Dogecoin, which appeared in 2013 as a joke built around the Shiba Inu dog meme. Unlike projects such as Ethereum or Chainlink, meme coins rest on no particular technology or use case — their value comes mainly from community, popularity on social media and speculation.
That is precisely why they tend to be extremely volatile. They can climb by hundreds of per cent within a few days, and fall back to almost nothing just as quickly. The token supply is often enormous (trillions of units is not unusual) and many projects are created purely to turn a quick profit. The table ranks meme coins by market capitalisation, so the largest and most liquid names sit at the top.
Before you invest in meme coins
Meme coins are among the riskiest assets in the entire crypto market — they usually have no intrinsic value or real use, and their price can drop sharply at any moment. Many have ended as a scam (a rug pull) or have collapsed by 90 per cent or more. This page is an informational overview of market data, not investment advice. Only invest what you can afford to lose entirely.
The best-known meme coins
Meme coins usually have no technology or real use of their own — what they share is a strong community and the ability to go viral. The following projects currently top the meme coin ranking by market capitalisation. The market moves extremely fast, though, and yesterday's leader can lose most of its value today.
Dogecoin (DOGE)
The very first meme coin, created in 2013 as a joke — originally a parody of Bitcoin bearing the Shiba Inu dog meme as its logo. Thanks to its community and the backing of well-known figures, it became the largest and best-known meme coin of all.
Shiba Inu (SHIB)
The so-called "Dogecoin killer" built on Ethereum. The community has also built a whole ecosystem around the token — the ShibaSwap decentralised exchange and its own Shibarium network. The token supply runs into the quadrillions.
Pepe (PEPE)
A meme coin based on the well-known Pepe the Frog internet meme. One of the fastest-growing tokens of 2023 — a purely community-driven project with no use, and a textbook example of extreme volatility.
Bonk (BONK) and dogwifhat (WIF)
Meme coins from the Solana blockchain ecosystem that kicked off a fresh wave of meme tokens. Both WIF (a dog in a hat) and BONK show how quickly a community token can rise — and fall.
Floki (FLOKI) and others
Floki (named after Elon Musk's dog) blends the meme theme with an attempt to build its own ecosystem. Around meme coins, however, plenty of tokens spring up that end as a scam — which is why extreme caution is warranted.
Meme coins can be fun, but as an investment they are pure speculation. The same rule applies as with a bet: only put in money you can afford to lose, and reckon on the value potentially dropping to zero.
Frequently asked questions
Which are the best meme coins?+
The largest meme coins by market capitalisation include Dogecoin (DOGE), Shiba Inu (SHIB) and Pepe (PEPE), followed by the likes of Bonk (BONK), dogwifhat (WIF) and Floki (FLOKI). You will find the full ranking in the table above.
Are meme coins a good investment?+
Meme coins are highly speculative and risky. They offer the chance of rapid gains, but equally of an almost total loss. They usually have no technological use, and their price depends mainly on the mood of the community. This list is for tracking the market, not a recommendation to buy.
Why are meme coins so volatile?+
Their price is not underpinned by any real use, but driven mainly by community demand, social-media trends and speculation. A single viral post or a comment from a well-known figure can send the price soaring or falling by tens of per cent in moments.