Shiba Inu just hit a major milestone in its deflationary journey: over 410.74 trillion SHIB tokens have now been permanently burned. That’s more than 41% of the original 1 quadrillion supply gone for good. On paper, that sounds bullish — less supply can lead to higher value, right? But with SHIB, it’s not quite that simple.
SHIB started as a meme coin, deliberately launched with a comically large supply — 1 quadrillion tokens. It was part of the joke, a nod to Dogecoin’s infinite supply and the absurdity of crypto culture. But as Shiba Inu gained real traction, the team began embracing a more serious, deflationary model.
The biggest burn happened in 2021, when Ethereum co-founder Vitalik Buterin received 50% of the SHIB supply as a surprise. He promptly burned 410 trillion tokens, sending them to a dead wallet. That single act made up the majority of what’s been destroyed so far.
As of now, SHIB’s total supply stands at approximately 589 trillion tokens. And the burn continues. Just this past week, over 687 million SHIB were removed from circulation — a 480% increase in burn rate week-over-week.
The headline numbers are impressive. But burns alone don’t guarantee a price increase. That’s because supply is only one side of the equation — demand matters just as much, if not more.
Despite the burn, SHIB still has hundreds of trillions of tokens in circulation. That massive supply creates a high hurdle for meaningful price movement unless demand sees a significant and sustained spike.
And that’s where SHIB is working to evolve — from meme to utility.
To create long-term demand, Shiba Inu’s team is focusing on real-world use cases. They’ve launched Shibarium, a Layer 2 blockchain network designed to make SHIB more scalable and affordable to use. On top of that, they’ve introduced the Shib Alpha Layer, a development environment aimed at helping builders create blockchain applications faster.
SHIB is also entering the Web3 gaming space via a partnership with TokenPlayAI, signaling a push into digital entertainment and interactive ecosystems — an area where meme coins rarely tread.
These moves show intent: SHIB doesn’t just want to be held, it wants to be used.
Yes, the burn is real. Yes, it’s significant. And yes, it shows a long-term commitment to deflationary tokenomics. But for SHIB to truly thrive, it needs more than fewer tokens — it needs more reasons to exist.
The path ahead requires utility, innovation, and user adoption. If Shibarium gains traction, if developers start building meaningful apps, and if the gaming push connects with real players, SHIB could outgrow its meme coin roots.
June 2025, Cryptoniteuae