OKX US Stocks · xStocks · Token List · 2026

OKX xStocks List 2026: Which US Stocks Can You Trade (and How Ondo Backs Them)

"Can I buy Apple on OKX?" "Is NVIDIA or Tesla on the xStocks list?" Ever since OKX launched roughly 263 tokenized US stocks on 27 April 2026 — through a partnership with Ondo Finance — those have been the questions filling search boxes. This guide isn't about how to open an account (that's the OKX US-stocks how-to); it answers the narrower one: which names you can trade, how they're named, and what actually backs them. For the fee side, start with the OKX rebate page.

The short answer: ~263 names, covering the stocks you can name off the top of your head

On 27 April 2026, via its tie-up with Ondo Finance, OKX brought a first batch of roughly 263 tokenized US stocks (xStocks-style tokenized equities) on-chain, all paired against USDT, with 24/7 trading and fractional sizing. That number is a starting point, not a ceiling: the token list adds and removes names over time, and whether you can see or trade any given one ultimately depends on what your verified account shows in OKX's official section. Below we break the roster down by type so you can quickly judge whether the name you want is likely to be there.

Which stocks? The four categories at a glance

Group the ~263 names by purpose and the list becomes easy to navigate (specific names and listing status are per OKX's official pages; the table below is an illustrative map, not a definitive roster):

CategoryRepresentative names (illustrative)Who trades it
Mega-cap & tech leadersApple AAPL, NVIDIA NVDA, Tesla TSLA, Microsoft MSFT, Amazon AMZN, Alphabet GOOGL, Meta, Broadcom AVGOAnyone wanting "Magnificent Seven" exposure — the bulk of demand
Popular growth / thematicAI, semiconductor, EV and other high-beta growth namesTheme and momentum traders
Broad-market ETFsETF tokens tracking the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100People who'd rather own the basket than pick stocks
Commodity / non-US add-onsGold, oil and similar commodity tokens (same framework)Allocators and hedgers

The rule of thumb: the more of a household name a US mega-cap is, the more likely it is already on the list; the more obscure or small-cap, the more you'll need to check OKX's official section in real time. If you'd rather take the index over single stocks, weigh the routes in stock tokens vs CFDs vs ETFs.

Naming rule: see "AAPLx," don't panic — that's the token

To keep tokenized stocks distinct from both real shares and crypto assets, the token usually appends a suffix to the original ticker — commonly forms like AAPLx, TSLAx, NVDAx (exact naming is per OKX's official pages). The pair is typically written "stock token / USDT." Three things keep you from buying the wrong thing:

  • A suffix means it's an on-chain token tracking the share price — not equity registered in your name;
  • It's quoted against USDT, so your P&L is denominated in stablecoin, not routed through a US-dollar bank account;
  • It is not an altcoin — don't confuse it with a similarly named crypto project token; confirm the pair inside OKX's official section.

How does it stay pegged to the real stock? Ondo's 1:1 reserves

This is the mechanism behind the list, and it's also what "is it safe?" really hinges on. xStocks-style tokens are backed by an issuer that holds the corresponding real shares or equivalent assets 1:1 as reserves, then issues an on-chain token that tracks the price — for OKX, that issuer relationship runs through Ondo Finance. So the token you buy has real assets behind it and a price that follows the underlying. Two boundaries have to be stated plainly:

  • You get price exposure, not ownership: no shareholder register, no voting rights, and dividends or corporate actions are handled per platform and issuer rules;
  • Reserve and redemption mechanics are per official disclosure: 1:1 is the issuer's commitment and disclosure — verifying it and understanding redemption is the homework before you size up a position.

The "safety / trust" layer of this — what Ondo's reserves, and the strategic investment in OKX by ICE (the owner of the New York Stock Exchange), do and do not mean — is unpacked in our OKX stock-token safety breakdown. If you want the risk assessment, read that one.

How to find the ticker you want in OKX — four steps

  1. Complete KYC: use a fully verified OKX account; no separate brokerage account is needed.
  2. Open the tokenized-stocks section: browse by category in OKX's tokenized-stocks / US-stock-token area, or just type the ticker (AAPL, NVDA) into the trade-page search.
  3. Confirm the pair: find the "stock token / USDT" pair and make sure it's the suffixed token, not a same-named asset.
  4. Limit order + fractional sizing: prefer limit orders; sizing is fractional, so a few tens of USDT buys a fraction of a share.

Two reminders: first, whether you see the entry depends on your jurisdiction — per OKX's notices the product is unavailable in the US and several other regions, and that list can change; this guide does not discuss circumventing any regional restriction. Second, during the US cash-session close the order book can thin out, so work larger orders in slices with limit orders rather than sweeping the book with market orders.

Fees and rebate: beyond the list, don't ignore the cost layer

Finding the name is step one; over time, "how much of the cost you claw back" matters just as much. xStocks trade on OKX's spot fee schedule, and there are three stacking ways to pay less: the base spot rate (lower at higher VIP tiers), OKB discounts, and rebate. A simple worked example (base estimated at 0.10% spot taker; the actual rate is per OKX's official schedule and your VIP tier):

StepFee / rateNote
Base trading fee$20 (at ~0.10%)Entry tier, $20,000 monthly volume
Stack up to 40% rebateUp to $8 backOn fees actually generated, settled weekly in USDT
Net cost~$12 (≈0.06%)Roughly 60% of base; "up to" is not guaranteed, actual settlement governs

Register through JackTrader's OKX rebate link and the fees you generate can earn up to 40% back, settled weekly in USDT ("up to" is not guaranteed; actual settlement governs). JackTrader is an independent referral partner, not affiliated with OKX, and operates single-tier referrals only — no downline, no multi-level structure. If your main book is on Binance, the logic is identical — see Binance rebate; if you run a community or traffic, the partner program structures better. A rebate lowers cost; it is not a promise of returns.

Three things to remember before you buy off the list

  • The list changes: ~263 is the first-batch number and it shifts with the issuance schedule — trust OKX's live official roster, not any fixed third-party list (including this article).
  • Token ≠ share: no voting rights, dividends per rules, and no SIPC-style protection; if you want to be a shareholder of record, a traditional broker still fits better.
  • Run it small first: the first time, walk a small amount through "search the name → limit-buy → sell back to USDT" so the naming and rule differences are clear before you scale.

Digital-asset and token trading carries risk, and this article is not investment advice. The OKX xStocks list solves "can I conveniently get price exposure to these stocks?" — it does not solve "should I buy, and how much?" For questions in English or Chinese, reach us on Telegram @Jack168668.

FAQ

How many US stocks can you trade on OKX xStocks?+
On 27 April 2026 OKX launched its first batch of roughly 263 tokenized US stocks through a partnership with Ondo Finance, all paired against USDT and supporting 24/7 trading and fractional sizing. The list grows and changes over time, so the exact count and which names are tradable is whatever your KYC-verified account shows in OKX's official tokenized-stocks section — treat any third-party list, including this one, as illustrative.
What categories of stocks are on the OKX xStocks list?+
Roughly four buckets: mega-cap and tech leaders (Apple, NVIDIA, Tesla, Microsoft, Amazon, Alphabet, Meta, Broadcom and similar); popular growth and thematic names (AI, semiconductors, EV); broad-market ETF tokens (tracking the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100); and a small set of commodity and non-US tokens (gold, oil) that share the same token framework. The specific names and whether any is listed are per OKX's official pages; the categories here are only to help you navigate.
How are OKX stock tokens named, and how do I tell them apart from crypto?+
Tokenized stocks usually append a suffix to the original ticker to distinguish them from real shares and from crypto assets — commonly forms like AAPLx, TSLAx or NVDAx (exact naming is per OKX's official pages). The trading pair is typically "stock token / USDT." A suffixed ticker means it is an on-chain token tracking the share price — not real equity, and not some altcoin with a similar name. Always confirm the pair inside OKX's official tokenized-stocks section.
How does an OKX xStock stay pegged to the real stock?+
xStocks-style tokens are backed by an issuer (Ondo Finance in OKX's case) that holds the corresponding real shares or equivalent assets 1:1 as reserves, then issues an on-chain token that tracks the price. You hold the tracking token: the price follows the underlying, but you are not on the shareholder register, you have no voting rights, and dividends or corporate actions are handled per platform and issuer rules. Reserve and redemption mechanics are per the issuer's official disclosures — verify them before sizing up.
Who can access the OKX xStocks list, and how do I find a specific ticker?+
You need a fully KYC-verified OKX account in an eligible, non-US jurisdiction; per OKX's notices the product is not available in the US and several other regions, and that list can change. To find a name, open OKX's tokenized-stocks section or type the ticker (e.g. AAPL, NVDA) into the trade-page search to pull up the "stock token / USDT" pair. Use limit orders, sizing is fractional, and a few tens of USDT is enough to open a position. This guide does not cover circumventing any regional restriction.
What fees and rebate apply when trading OKX xStocks?+
xStocks trade on OKX's spot fee schedule — roughly 0.08% maker / 0.10% taker at the entry tier, lower at VIP volume tiers, with OKB discounts; the rate you pay is whatever OKX's official schedule says. On top, registering through JackTrader's OKX rebate link can return up to 40% of your trading fees, settled weekly in USDT. "Up to 40%" is not guaranteed and actual settlement governs; JackTrader is an independent referral partner not affiliated with OKX, and operates single-tier referrals only.

Found your ticker? Claw up to 40% of the fees back too

Register OKX / Binance through JackTrader and earn rebates from your next trade — settled weekly, paid in USDT.

Disclaimer: the stock categories and figures here are illustrative, compiled from public information at the time of writing, and may change at any time — OKX's official pages govern. Stock tokens are not securities-account holdings and do not constitute equity ownership; digital-asset and token trading carries risk and this article is informational only, not investment advice. OKX / Binance availability depends on jurisdiction and requires compliance with local rules and KYC.