Coinbase launched The Blue Carpet, then added BNB to its roadmap — an intent signal, not a guarantee — pending market-making support and technical readiness.
By Siamak Masnavi, AI Boost|Edited by Aoyon Ashraf
Updated Oct 15, 2025, 5:48 p.m. Published Oct 15, 2025, 5:38 p.m.

- Coinbase introduced “The Blue Carpet,” a consolidated listings experience with direct access to its listings team, asset-page customization, referral discounts and select Coinbase One seats.
- Thirty-three minutes later, Coinbase added BNB to its listing roadmap; roadmap inclusion is not a guarantee and trading will start only after liquidity and technical criteria are met, with a separate launch notice.
- The signal is notable because bnb anchors the BNB Chain tied to Binance, Coinbase’s fiercest rival; listing remains free and does not require issuers to buy ancillary services.
Coinbase surprised crypto markets on Wednesday by unveiling a new issuer-facing listings program and, minutes later, adding BNB to its listing roadmap — an unexpected nod to the flagship token of its biggest rival.
At 4:12 p.m. UTC, the Coinbase Markets account on X introduced “The Blue Carpet,” a revamped asset-listing experience aimed at making the process more transparent for onchain builders.
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According to Coinbase’s blog post, the bundle offers a direct line to the listings team for tailored guidance, the ability to request updates to an asset’s page across Coinbase’s centralized exchange and its retail DEX, referral discounts for services such as MiCA whitepaper support and market-maker matching, and limited Coinbase One subscriptions for select core team members. Coinbase reiterated that applications and listings are free and that issuers are not required to purchase ancillary services.
At 4:45 p.m. UTC, Coinbase Markets posted that BNB had been added to the roadmap. As with other roadmap items, the signal reflects intent rather than immediate availability. Roadmap inclusion does not ensure a listing; Coinbase can delay or decline assets if liquidity, technical, compliance, or other requirements are not satisfied. Coinbase said trading will be announced separately once sufficient market-making support and infrastructure are in place.
The timing is notable.
Just nine days earlier, Arca CIO Jeff Dorman published a critique arguing Coinbase lists “some of the absolute worst assets” while ignoring “the best ones,” and he highlighted tokens issued by rival platforms — including BNB — as examples of high performers the exchange had historically not offered. He said an exchange should either list widely and be neutral, or curate the “best assets” like a broker, and faulted Coinbase for falling between those models.
Dorman further contrasted BNB, LEO, TRX and HYPE — citing revenue-backed buybacks and strong tokenomics — with what he called inflationary tokens and opaque listing practices, framing Coinbase’s approach as selectively exclusionary. Against that backdrop, adding BNB to the roadmap looks like a meaningful shift in posture, even if a listing is not guaranteed.
Beyond its 2017 origins as a trading-fee token, BNB now serves as the primary gas asset for BNB Chain transactions and is used across that network for payments, staking, token launches and governance proposals — functioning as the chain’s transaction fuel and utility token.
Pairing the Blue Carpet rollout with a high-profile roadmap addition signals Coinbase aims to court major nonnative assets when liquidity, compliance and technical standards are met — rival affiliations notwithstanding.
At the time of writing, bnb was $1,164.33, down 4.7% in the past 24 hours.
AI Disclaimer: Parts of this article were generated with the assistance from AI tools and reviewed by our editorial team to ensure accuracy and adherence to our standards. For more information, see CoinDesk’s full AI Policy.
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