Which Binance domain suffix in search is real?

2026-04-20 · Quick Start · 14
Why So Few of the Search Results Are Real Paid Ad Slots Algorithmic Organic Ranking Third-Party Directory Sites 5 Hard Indicators for Telling Real from Fake 1. Check the Main Domain 2. Check the SSL Certificate's Organization Name 3. Check Page Language and Currency Symbols 4. Check the Customer Service Entry 5. Reverse-Check with the Verify Tool Common Trap Phrasings in Search Results Safer Ways to Enter Type the URL Manually Jump from Official Social Accounts Use the App Instead of the Web What to Do If You Click Into a Fake Site Frequently Asked Questions

If you search "Binance official site" on Baidu, Google, or Bing, typically only 1–2 of the first 10 results are real. The rest are ads, directories, copycats, or outdated news pages. There is only one core rule for telling real from fake: the main domain must be binance.com (or binance.us for the US region). Any other suffix, prefix, or variation should set off alarms. To sidestep the risk of searching, we recommend going straight to the genuine signup page through Binance Official Site, grabbing the APK from Binance Official App, or following the iOS Install Guide to install on Apple devices.

Why So Few of the Search Results Are Real

Search engines rank pages based on three things: paid ads, algorithmic ranking, and user behavior data. All three are easy for phishing groups to exploit.

Paid Ad Slots

Binance used to run brand-keyword ads on some search engines but later withdrew them for compliance reasons. Since 2022, ads shown when searching "Binance" have almost all been fake sites. They use titles nearly identical to the official one, blue-and-white favicons, and even steal Binance's brand logo.

Algorithmic Organic Ranking

The real binance.com is indexed inconsistently by Chinese search engines, which pushes its algorithmic ranking down. Many copycat sites use click farms and backlinks to push themselves to the first page, landing above the real site.

Third-Party Directory Sites

"xx Crypto Directory" and "Crypto A–Z" kinds of sites may list outdated links or may have been paid to include fake ones. The odds of being redirected to a phishing site after clicking are very high.

5 Hard Indicators for Telling Real from Fake

1. Check the Main Domain

The real official site has only two legitimate forms:

Site Main Domain Purpose
Global site binance.com For users worldwide
US site binance.us For US residents only

If any of the following appears, treat it as fake without exception:

  • binance.cc / binance.net / binance.org / binance.cash
  • binanace / biance / b1nance / bianance and other spelling variants
  • binance-xxx.com / xxx-binance.com or anything with a hyphen
  • binance.com.xxxx where binance.com is used as a sub-domain

2. Check the SSL Certificate's Organization Name

The real official site's HTTPS certificate lists Binance Holdings Limited in the organization field. Click the lock icon in the address bar to view it. If you see a personal "Let's Encrypt" certificate or an unfamiliar company name, it is almost certainly a fake.

3. Check Page Language and Currency Symbols

The real official site auto-switches the default language based on your IP and supports 30+ languages and 40+ fiat currencies. Fake sites usually only have Chinese, support only USD or CNY for fiat, and have far fewer coins listed.

4. Check the Customer Service Entry

The real official site's support links all point to binance.com/support. Once inside, you should see the Bianca chatbot, a ticket system, and help documentation. Fake sites usually offer a Telegram account or QQ for support, which is the most obvious red flag.

5. Reverse-Check with the Verify Tool

Paste any suspicious URL into binance.com/verify. If it is not on the official whitelist, close the tab immediately. This tool supports verifying URLs, emails, Telegram accounts, and app package names — it is the most authoritative anti-phishing measure.

Common Trap Phrasings in Search Results

The title patterns most frequently reported by users over the past year:

  • "Binance Official Login Portal — Latest URL 2024" (the real site never names itself this way)
  • "Binance China Official Site — Exclusive Channel for Chinese Users" (there is no such thing as a "Binance China site")
  • "Binance official registration — claim 100 USDT" (Binance never promotes its new-user rewards this way)
  • "Binance Permanent Address — Prevents Redirects" (the permanent address is binance.com itself)

Any exaggerated or "exclusive" phrasing like this is almost certainly a fake site.

Safer Ways to Enter

Type the URL Manually

Never go through a search engine to reach the official site. Manually type binance.com — it is the simplest and safest method. Bookmark it with Ctrl+D after your first visit, and always come back through the bookmark.

Jump from Official Social Accounts

Binance has verified accounts on Twitter, Facebook, and Telegram. Entering through links on those profile pages is far safer than searching. The official Twitter handle is @binance, and Chinese-language Telegram groups can be found on the official site's "Community" page.

Use the App Instead of the Web

Mobile users should just install the app. The app cannot be hijacked via DNS, nor interfered with by browser extensions. The APK downloaded from Binance Official App is the latest officially signed build.

What to Do If You Click Into a Fake Site

  1. Close the page immediately and do not enter anything
  2. Check your browser history, copy the fake URL into binance.com/verify, and report it
  3. If you have already entered your credentials, log in through the app on your phone and immediately change the password and 2FA
  4. If you have downloaded a suspicious APK, delete it and run a full scan with your phone's security software
  5. If you have lost funds, contact binance.com/support right away to request an account freeze

Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: Isn't the first result on Google the real official site? Not necessarily. The top entries on Google are often ads or copycats. The only reliable judgement is whether the main domain is binance.com, not the ranking order.

Q2: I searched "Binance" in my mobile browser and landed on a site called binance.link. Is it real? Fake. Binance has never used the .link suffix for its main site. Close it immediately and do not log in.

Q3: Are the "Binance official entries" on directory sites trustworthy? No. Many directories sell their ad slots to the highest bidder, and the links can be swapped for fake sites at any time.

Q4: If I only registered on a fake site without depositing, is my account safe? Your email and password have already been leaked to scammers. We recommend you immediately change the password for that email on the real official site, or register a new account with a new email.

Q5: Why does my browser block me when I type binance.com? You may have a so-called "crypto-blocking" extension installed. Disable it or switch to another browser.

Android: direct APK install. iOS: requires overseas Apple ID