Coinbase to Delist ETH-DAI, FLOW-USDT, and MANA-ETH Trading Pairs

Coinbase to Delist ETH-DAI, FLOW-USDT, and MANA-ETH Trading Pairs

According to Coinbase, trading in ETH-DAI, FLOW-USDT, and MANA-ETH will end on Jan. 7, 2026 at 12:00 ET to improve market health and concentrate liquidity; USD order books remain for Advanced users.

ETH
USDT
DAI

Fact Check
The assessment is based on strong, consistent, and direct evidence from multiple relevant sources. Two crypto-focused news publications directly report that Coinbase announced it will suspend trading for the exact three pairs mentioned in the statement: ETH/DAI, FLOW/USDT, and MANA/ETH. A third source, a crypto data platform's news feed, corroborates this information. There is no conflicting evidence provided in any of the sources. While the sources use the term "suspend trading" and the statement uses "delist," these terms are often used interchangeably in this context to mean the cessation of trading for a specific pair. The core claim that these pairs will be made unavailable for trading is well-supported. The sources with high authority but low or zero relevance (e.g., the CoinDesk homepage, Crunchbase, Blockworks, Wikipedia) do not contradict the claim and were disregarded as they contain no information on the topic. The convergence of information across multiple relevant sources provides a high degree of confidence in the statement's truthfulness.
Summary

In an official announcement, Coinbase said it will remove the ETH-DAI, FLOW-USDT, and MANA-ETH trading pairs on January 7, 2026, at 12:00 ET to improve market health and focus liquidity. Eligible Coinbase Advanced users can continue trading ETH, FLOW, and MANA via USD order books. The affected pairs are currently limited to limit orders only.

Terms & Concepts
  • Order Book: A list of buy and sell orders for a specific asset on an exchange, organized by price level.
  • ETH-DAI: A trading pair between Ethereum and DAI, a U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoin on the Ethereum blockchain.
  • USDT: Tether, a widely used stablecoin pegged to the U.S. dollar.