Tokenized stocks · How-to · Two routes

How to buy Tesla and Nvidia stock tokens (two routes)

Two routes to buy Tesla and Nvidia stock tokens: USDT on spot for TSLAB, and Web3 Wallet Swap for NVDAx
To buy Tesla and Nvidia stock tokens there are two routes: one on Binance spot with USDT, one in the Web3 Wallet via Swap. Below, both walked end to end.

"I want both the Tesla and the Nvidia token, can I just buy them in one place together?" That's the question I get asked most. The answer: not necessarily in the same place. They're both stock tokens, but they can belong to two different systems, with different entry points and different assets to pay with. Getting that straight is what keeps you from buying the wrong thing and wasting money.

So I'll use Tesla and Nvidia as the examples and walk both routes for buying stock tokens: one on Binance spot, with USDT (the bStocks system, tickers shaped like TSLAB); the other in Binance Web3 Wallet, through Swap (the xStocks system, tickers shaped like NVDAx). I'll take you through step by step, but the more important part comes first, carve "verify the genuine token, control the risk" into your head before we talk about how to operate.

First, the two routes: TSLAB and NVDAx

I picked two different suffixes on purpose, so the difference sticks at a glance. A different suffix often means a different system and a different place to buy:

  • The TSLAB kind (suffix B): part of the bStocks system, tokenized US stocks listed on the Binance exchange, issued by Binance affiliate BTech Holdings, bought and sold on Binance spot with USDT.
  • The NVDAx kind (suffix x): part of the xStocks system, issued by Backed Finance, running on the Solana chain, bought through Swap in Binance Web3 Wallet.

Notice I said "the kind." Whether a specific name is actually listed, and which exact ticker it uses, goes entirely by what Binance's page and your wallet list at the time (as of 2026-06). The TSLAB and NVDAx I cite are there to show the naming pattern of the two routes, not for you to go search those exact strings. I'll keep stressing this, because searching by an expired or misremembered ticker is the number-one reason beginners buy the wrong token.

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Hold onto this: a tokenized US stock is not a real share. It's an on-chain token that tracks the price, with no shareholder rights, regional regulatory limits, and price and liquidity risk, and it's unavailable in some regions. This piece only covers how to operate, and is not investment advice. Whether you buy, and how much, is your judgment and your responsibility.

Confirm three things before you start

Whichever route you take, confirm these three first and you'll save yourself most of the hassle:

  1. Whether it's available where you are. Tokenized US stocks are unavailable in some countries and regions. Log in first and check whether the feature is open to you. No entry or a limit notice means it's not supported for now. Don't bypass the limit; that's both non-compliant and unprotected.
  2. Whether your account is ID-verified. Without an account and verification you can't trade. We wrote a piece on this, register on Binance and pass KYC the first time. Get the account open first.
  3. Whether you've sized the amount. For the first go, practice with a small amount you can fully afford to lose, one that won't dent your life. The point is to learn the flow, not to make money. That matters more than any operating trick.

Route 1: buy TSLAB with USDT on spot

Take the exchange route first. Its upside is a low barrier to entry: the steps are nearly identical to buying any other coin on Binance, which suits people just starting out who aren't yet at home with on-chain wallets. Using the Tesla-tracking token as the example, it's roughly these steps:

  1. Get some USDT ready. There has to be USDT in the account first. If there isn't, deposit or swap some out, sized to your small budget.
  2. Find the matching pair. On Binance spot, search the Tesla token's actual ticker at the time (the one listed on Binance's page, not one you type from memory), and find a pair shaped like "ticker/USDT."
  3. Confirm once more which product it is. Before ordering, make sure this is the bStocks officially listed by Binance, not something else with a similar name. What's listed on Binance is what you want.
  4. Pick an order type. A market order fills instantly at the current price, simple and direct; a limit order lets you set a price you want and fills only when it's hit, more controllable. To get a feel for the flow, place a small market order first.
  5. Enter the amount, confirm, order. bStocks support fractional buying, so you can buy by amount or by size without rounding to a whole "share." Check it over, submit, and after it fills you'll see the position in your assets.

There's no mystery to this route. The hard part was never "how to tap," it's whether you truly understand, before tapping, that you're buying a tracking token and whether you can stomach its swings. For the bStocks issuer, tracking mechanism, and finer order details, we wrote a dedicated piece, what Binance bStocks are and how to buy them on spot, which rounds this out.

For the spot route, you need a Binance account first

Register on Binance through our invite code for a 20% trading-fee discount*. * Actual rate shown on Binance, subject to change. Whether tokenized stocks are available depends on your region.

Invite codeBN4001
Sign up for Binance

Route 2: buy NVDAx via Swap in Web3 Wallet

Now the on-chain route. It runs inside Binance Web3 Wallet, and what you buy is xStocks (issuer Backed Finance, running on the Solana chain). This route's bar is a little higher, you need to know a bit about wallets and Swap, but the upside is reaching another system and another set of underlyings. Using the Nvidia-tracking token as the example, it's roughly these steps:

  1. Open a Binance Web3 Wallet. Enter the Web3 Wallet inside the Binance app and create/open it as guided. Be sure to back up your seed phrase properly, never screenshot or upload it, never tell anyone. It's the lifeblood of an on-chain wallet.
  2. Get SOL ready for fuel. xStocks are on the Solana chain, on-chain actions cost gas, and gas is paid in SOL. Using SOL is the convenient route. Keep a little SOL in the wallet so the swap doesn't stall halfway for being "out of fuel."
  3. Open Swap, find the matching token. In the wallet's Swap, search the Nvidia token's actual ticker at the time (verify the genuine one listed officially or in the wallet, don't search by an old article). Verifying the genuine token matters even more on-chain, and gets its own section below.
  4. Swap with SOL (or a supported asset). Set the amount to swap, confirm the route and the estimated amount you'll receive, look closely at on-chain gas and the bid-ask spread, and confirm once it's fine.
  5. Confirm the fill, check the position. After the swap succeeds, the matching stock token lands in your wallet and shows up in your assets.

On this route's cost there's a point in your favor: per the official info, Binance Web3 Wallet charges no service fee on the stock tokens themselves; what you mainly bear is Solana on-chain gas (per Binance's official terms, as of 2026-06). On-chain gas floats with congestion and is cheaper in quiet windows. For finer wallet steps, see how to buy xStocks in Binance Web3 Wallet; for how the costs of both routes add up and how to save, see how fees and gas on stock tokens add up.

For the on-chain route, use Swap in Binance Web3 Wallet

The wallet charges no service fee on stock tokens; you pay only Solana on-chain gas, and SOL is the convenient way. * Keep your seed phrase safe yourself and never leak it. Whether tokenized stocks are available depends on your region.

Learn about Binance Web3 Wallet

Verify the genuine token, don't buy a copycat

This is the section to highlight most, especially on the on-chain route. A tokenized stock's ticker can be impersonated, and on-chain the copycats run rampant. A fake whose name is off by a letter, whose issuer doesn't match, will cost you both your money and your gas the moment you swap into it, with your principal possibly gone for good. A few hard rules:

  • Trust only the ticker the official entry lists. For bStocks, check the ticker listed at the time in the matching section of Binance spot; for xStocks, verify the genuine ticker in Binance Web3 Wallet or from the issuer's official channel. Don't search by the illustrative ticker in any article (this one included).
  • Check the issuer. The bStocks issuer is Binance affiliate BTech Holdings, the xStocks issuer is Backed Finance. If the issuer doesn't match, however alike it looks, don't touch it.
  • One extra guard on-chain. Anyone can mint a similarly named token on-chain, so the contract address and the issuer both have to match. If you're unsure, stop, and don't swap just because "the name looks like it."
  • Slowing down is no shame. Spending two extra minutes to verify the genuine token beats saving that time and buying wrong, by a mile. This is the most hidden, and most fatal, line in the cost.
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A sound habit: before acting on any tokenized asset, ask three things, who issues it, what it tracks, and who's on the hook if something fails. Getting those three clear in the official terms matters far more than watching the price chart. If you can't get them clear, or they don't match, don't buy yet.

Which route for Tesla, which for Nvidia

Back to the opening question: which route do Tesla and Nvidia each take? Honestly, it depends on which system each is listed under at the time and which route is available where you are, and these change, so I can't hand you a fixed mapping. But here's a way to pick a route:

Your situationBetter routeWhy
Just starting, only familiar with Binance spotRoute 1 (spot USDT, buy bStocks)Same as buying any coin; low barrier, hard to get wrong
Comfortable with on-chain wallets, want the xStocks systemRoute 2 (Web3 Wallet Swap, buy xStocks)Reaches xStocks underlyings, but you need to know wallets and SOL
The underlying you want is listed on only one sideWhichever side has itGo by what Binance's page and the wallet actually list at the time
Only one route is available in your regionThe available oneUse what works, and don't bypass the limit on what doesn't

So the right move is this: go into Binance spot and the Web3 Wallet, check where your Tesla/Nvidia token is currently listed, what ticker it uses, and whether it's available on your side, then pick the route you're less likely to slip up on. For a beginner, making fewer mistakes always beats chasing "buy them all."

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The risk, said up front: tokenized US stocks layer share-price swings on top of crypto-asset traits, prices can rise and fall sharply in a short time, with issuer, custody, smart-contract, regional-regulation, liquidity and other layered risks, and they're unavailable in some regions. This piece only covers operation, is not investment advice, and you should use money you can afford to lose and judge for yourself. To think through how it differs from a real share, see how tokenized US stocks differ from real shares, and please read our disclaimer too.

A few questions you can't get around

Are TSLAB and NVDAx the exact tickers?

These are illustrations of the naming pattern (ending in B usually means bStocks, ending in x usually means xStocks), not exact tickers for you to search by. Whether a specific underlying is listed and which exact ticker it uses goes entirely by what Binance's spot page and the Web3 Wallet actually list at the time (as of 2026-06). Searching by an old ticker is the number-one reason for buying wrong.

Can I buy Tesla and Nvidia together in one place?

Not necessarily. They may belong to bStocks (spot USDT) and xStocks (wallet Swap), two separate systems, with different entries and different assets to pay with. Confirm where each underlying you want is currently listed and whether it's available on your side, then decide which route to take.

On the on-chain Swap, how do I confirm I didn't buy a copycat?

Trust only the genuine ticker listed by the official entry (the Binance spot section, Binance Web3 Wallet, the issuer's official channel), check the issuer (BTech Holdings / Backed Finance), and on-chain the contract has to match too. If the name looks right but the issuer or contract doesn't match, however alike it looks, don't touch it. Better to go slow.

Which route is cheaper?

The spot route runs on Maker/Taker fees (during the promo, Maker 0 fee, before 2026-08-31, per Binance's announcement). The on-chain route mainly pays Solana gas (the wallet charges no service fee on the stock tokens). There's no route that's always cheaper, and for a beginner "not getting it wrong" beats "saving that bit of fee." See how fees and gas add up.

What if neither route is available in my region?

Then don't touch it. Tokenized US stocks are unavailable in some regions, and no entry or a limit notice means it's not supported for now. Don't get around the regional limit by any means; that's both non-compliant and drops you into an unprotected gray zone where, if something goes wrong, you've nowhere to turn.

How much should a beginner buy first?

Practice with a small amount you can fully afford to lose, one that won't affect your life if it's gone. The point is to learn the whole "order/swap, fill, asset shows up" loop, not to make money. Crypto is volatile, so running the flow with small money first and keeping your head steady beats anything else.


Buying Tesla and Nvidia stock tokens comes down to two routes: USDT on spot, or a swap in the wallet. The handling isn't hard. The hard part is whether, before you tap, you've verified the genuine token, thought clearly that you're buying a tracking token rather than a real share, and kept the amount in check. Get those few things done, and the rest is just following the steps. Only as much as you can afford, and only if you can stomach the loss.

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