How Long Does It Take to Burn 1 Trillion LUNC
Many community members keep asking the same question: how long does it take to burn 1 trillion LUNC?
To answer this, we use simple math based on real on chain data, not assumptions or price speculation.
This analysis reflects historical burn performance only.
Before reviewing the numbers, it is important to understand that LUNC is burned through two mechanisms.
The first is on chain transaction burns, which come from real network usage such as transfers and smart contract interactions.
The second is direct wallet burns, where LUNC is manually sent to the burn wallet by individuals, exchanges, or organizations.
Both burn sources are calculated separately to keep the analysis transparent.
Time Period Covered
| Description | Duration |
|---|---|
| Burn start date | May 13, 2022 |
| End date | January 28, 2026 |
| Total duration | 1,356 days |
Total LUNC Burned
| Burn Source | Total Burned |
|---|---|
| On chain transactions | 84.49 billion LUNC |
| Direct wallet burns | 352.57 billion LUNC |
| Total burned | 437.06 billion LUNC |
This clearly shows that most LUNC burns so far come from direct wallet burns rather than organic network activity.
Average Daily Burn Rate
Using a total duration of 1,356 days, the average daily burn rate can be calculated.
Total burn rate including all sources:
437.06 billion LUNC divided by 1,356 days equals approximately
322.4 million LUNC burned per day.
On chain transaction burns only:
84.49 billion LUNC divided by 1,356 days equals approximately
62.3 million LUNC burned per day.
Time Required to Burn 1 Trillion LUNC
| Burn Scenario | Days Required | Years Required |
|---|---|---|
| All burn sources | 3,101 days | Approximately 8.5 years |
| On chain only | 16,048 days | Approximately 43.9 years |
Projection Breakdown
| Burn Scenario | Days | Months | Years |
|---|---|---|---|
| All burn sources | 3,101 | About 102 months | About 8.5 years |
| On chain only | 16,048 | About 528 months | About 43.9 years |
Key Observations
More than eighty percent of all LUNC burned so far comes from direct wallet burns.
On chain transaction burns alone are too slow to significantly reduce supply within a reasonable timeframe.
Without a major increase in real network usage, utility, and transaction volume, the burn rate will remain limited.
This analysis shows that sustainable supply reduction depends on stronger on chain activity rather than voluntary burns.
