To answer this question, you really only need to remember one line: Binance's main domain has always been binance.com, and everything else is either an official backup or a regional site. You can go directly to the main site via the Binance Official Site, or download the Binance Official App directly to avoid any web-level risks. Apple users who run into download issues can refer to the iOS Install Guide. This article lists every official domain currently in use so you have a reference to check against.
Binance's Official Domains Currently in Use
Binance has been operating globally for more than ten years and has accumulated multiple domains: a main site, backups, regional sub-sites, and dedicated entrances for news and content. Once you understand what each one is for, you won't mistake binance.com and binance.info for two separate platforms.
Main Domain binance.com
This is Binance's flagship domain, and the company has used it ever since it was founded in 2017. The vast majority of users around the world register, log in, and trade through this domain. Whether you're doing spot, futures, or earn products, the first entry point is always binance.com.
Information Domain binance.info
binance.info doesn't handle trading. It is mainly used to publish Binance's official announcements, project explainers, and Academy content. Many users assume .info must be a fake site, but it is actually a domain Binance owns itself — it just has lower search weight than the main domain. If you see a binance.info link in a search engine pointing to an official Binance-branded page, it's safe to click.
Short Link Domain binance.bz
binance.bz is a short domain Binance added in the last couple of years. At only ten characters, it is convenient for sharing on social media. Clicking it usually triggers a 301 redirect to the corresponding page on binance.com. It functions like a link shortener, but since Binance runs it, it is safer than a public shortener such as bit.ly.
U.S. Site binance.us
Even though this domain is called "binance," it is actually operated by an independent, licensed U.S. company and is not the same as binance.com. Users inside the United States use binance.us; users elsewhere should not register on this domain, because regional restrictions will prevent you from using the full feature set.
Regional Domains
In addition to the core domains above, Binance holds several regional sites, including country-code domains for certain countries. These domains are aimed at compliant users in the corresponding jurisdictions, and access is automatically filtered by IP to determine whether you can log in.
How to Confirm the Domain You Are Visiting Is Real
The key to spotting a fake is in the details — not whether the site looks similar, but the exact domain string shown in your browser.
Step 1: Look at the Address Bar
As soon as the site loads, lock your eyes on the address bar. The correct main domain must be exactly binance.com. There may be a subdomain prefix such as www. or accounts., but the body "binance.com" must not gain or lose a single letter. Common impersonation spellings include biinance.com (an extra i), binanse.com (s replaces n), and binance-login.com (a hyphen added).
Step 2: Check the SSL Certificate
Click the padlock icon to the left of the address bar and the certificate information will pop up. On the genuine Binance site, the certificate's subject will read Binance Holdings Limited or a related Binance entity, and the issuer is usually a mainstream CA such as DigiCert, Let's Encrypt, or Cloudflare.
Step 3: Examine Page Details
On the real official site, the logo, fonts, and icon resolution are all consistent — nothing is blurry or misaligned. The registration page also asks for information that matches international exchange norms: email or phone number, password, and referral code. It will never ask for your bank card number or banking password on top of that.
Feature Comparison of the Four Common Domains
| Domain | Tradable | Primary Purpose | Target Region |
|---|---|---|---|
| binance.com | Yes | Full-service main site | Global (excluding U.S.) |
| binance.info | No | Announcements, news, Academy | Global |
| binance.bz | Yes (redirect) | Short-link promotion | Global |
| binance.us | Yes | U.S.-compliant trading | Inside the U.S. |
The table makes it clear: the only core entry point where you can actually register and trade is binance.com. The others are either supporting sites or aimed at specific regions, and they are not interchangeable.
Why Does Binance Use So Many Domains
Some users get nervous the moment they see multiple domains, worrying it's a scam pattern. In reality, every large multinational platform holds dozens or even hundreds of related domains, for three reasons.
Defensive Registration
To prevent malicious actors from squatting on similar domains, Binance proactively buys up the various "binance" variants — different country suffixes, common misspellings, and so on. Holding these domains protects users; it's not about opening branch sites.
Handling Access Blocks
On some networks the main domain may be slow, and Binance will activate a backup domain so users can still connect. Backup domains are typically announced in advance on the official Twitter account or by email — they won't simply show up in your search results out of nowhere.
Separating Business Lines
For example, binance.info is dedicated to news, and the academy.binance.com subdomain is dedicated to the Academy. This split keeps page structure cleaner and makes SEO and content management easier.
Best Practices for Finding the Entry
No matter how many domains there are, as an ordinary user you don't need to memorize them all. The routine below will always get you to the correct entry.
Method 1: Type It Directly in the Browser
The simplest and most mistake-proof method. Type binance.com into the address bar and press Enter. Don't click in from a search engine result, so you avoid paid ads.
Method 2: Save It to Bookmarks
After confirming the page is correct the first time, press Ctrl+D (Windows) or Cmd+D (Mac) to add it to your bookmarks. Next time, open it straight from bookmarks. Breaking the habit of searching for it every time is one of the most important steps in anti-phishing.
Method 3: Use the Official App
Every link inside the App is controlled by Binance itself, so there is no way you can end up on a fake site. If you trade frequently, using the App is safer than the web version.
What If the Domain Is Blocked or Unreachable
Occasionally binance.com may be unreachable on your local network. When this happens, don't rush to a third-party mirror site — troubleshoot in this order.
Switch DNS
First change your local DNS to 1.1.1.1 (Cloudflare) or 8.8.8.8 (Google). Very often the problem is local DNS pollution, and swapping the resolver is enough to restore access.
Try Mobile Data
Switch to 4G/5G and see if it loads. If it does, the issue is with your home Wi-Fi.
Open the Official App
The App uses a different network channel from the web. When the website won't open, the App often still works. This is why we recommend installing the App in advance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are binance.com and bnb.com the Same Thing
No. bnb.com is not a domain owned by Binance, and it currently doesn't point to Binance content either. Don't treat bnb.com as an official entry. BNB is the native token of the Binance chain and has no direct relationship with that domain.
What's the Difference Between www.binance.com and binance.com
They point to the same main site; either works. The server automatically performs a 301 redirect, and the final landing page is identical. The www prefix is just a subdomain used for historical reasons.
Is the First Search Engine Result Always the Official Site
Not necessarily. The top spot is often an ad slot, and you have to inspect the domain carefully. Google marks ads as "Sponsored," and Baidu labels them as "广告" (ad); check carefully before clicking.
Will the Binance Address Change in the Future
The main domain binance.com has been stable since 2017 and is unlikely to change. Even if Binance's headquarters relocates, the main domain will stay with the brand.
Why Did Someone Tell Me to Log In to Another Domain
If someone in a chat group or private message sends you a "new address" and asks you to log in, 99% of the time it's phishing. Binance will never tell you to switch domains via private chat; official notices go through email or in-App messages.