"Is Apple on there? What about Nvidia?" It's the first question most people ask, and the honest answer has two halves. Yes, the big mainstream names are usually available. And also: any fixed list you read in an article is out of date the moment it's published, because the roster moves and differs by region. So this piece does both — a picture of what's typically there, and how to check the real, current list in ten seconds.
No ticker in this article is a recommendation, and no list here is authoritative. The available stocks change often and differ by region — the only reliable list is the one on Binance's page at the moment you look (as of 2026-07). Names are mentioned as examples of what's commonly offered, nothing more. This is not investment advice.
Start with the reassuring part. Binance's US stock offering leans toward the names people already recognize — mainstream US large caps and the most popular tech companies, plus some ETFs. If your interest is in the household names that dominate the US market, you'll usually find them. The ones commonly included are the sort of tickers you'd expect:
| Category | Examples commonly seen (go by the official page) |
|---|---|
| Big tech | AAPL (Apple), NVDA (Nvidia), MSFT (Microsoft), GOOGL (Alphabet), AMZN (Amazon), META (Meta) |
| Popular growth names | TSLA (Tesla) and other widely followed tickers |
| ETFs | Some broad-market ETFs may be included, depending on the current roster |
Read that table as illustrative, not exhaustive and not guaranteed. The point it makes is simple: this isn't an obscure corner of the market. The offering is built around the stocks with the most recognition and, usually, the most liquidity — which is sensible, because those are the names people search for and the ones that trade most smoothly. If you came wanting exposure to the big US tech story, the odds are good the names are there. What's harder to find is anything outside that mainstream tier, and that's where the moving nature of the list starts to matter.
Here's the part that trips people up. There is no permanent, stable list of "the US stocks on Binance," and there's a good reason for it. The roster is actively managed and shifts for several reasons at once:
That's why copying a list into an article is close to useless the day after it's written — and why every reputable guide, this one included, keeps pointing you back to the live page. It's not evasion; it's just the honest state of a fast-moving product. The skill worth having isn't memorizing a roster that will change; it's knowing exactly where to look so you always have today's answer.
Including this one. Any roster written down goes stale, and it may not match what's open in your region. Treat article lists as a rough sense of "what kind of stocks," and always confirm the specific ticker on Binance's own page before you plan a trade around it.
This is the genuinely useful part, and it takes seconds. To see what's actually available to you right now:
Do that once and you never have to wonder again. The live view is always right, always current, and always tailored to your region — three things no article list can be. If you're not sure how to reach the section in the first place, the step-by-step is in how to enable US stocks on Binance.
The current, region-specific roster appears inside your account. If you don't have one yet, sign up with code BN771 for up to 20% off trading fees*. CoinVair is an independent Binance affiliate partner, not Binance official.
Sign up on Binance with BN771 →Say you search for a specific ticker and it's not on the list. A few things could be going on, and it's worth knowing which before you conclude anything:
Whatever the reason, the wrong response is to look for a workaround. Do not use dodgy methods to get around a regional restriction — that puts your account at risk and can breach the terms you agreed to. If a stock you want genuinely isn't available to you, the clean alternatives are to stick to what is on the list, or to consider a traditional broker for that specific name. There's a whole comparison of when a broker fits better in Binance US stocks vs a traditional broker.
Once you can see the list, the temptation is to treat it like a menu and start ordering. A couple of restraints are worth keeping in mind, because "available" and "wise to buy" are not the same thing.
Liquidity varies within the list. The most recognized names usually trade smoothly with a tight spread; less prominent tickers can have a wider gap between buy and sell prices, which is a real cost even though it isn't labelled as a fee. All else equal, the more liquid names are gentler on your execution — the mechanics of that sit in the fees and taxes piece.
Recognition is not a reason to buy. Seeing Apple or Nvidia on the list doesn't make either a good purchase at any given price. The list tells you what you can buy; it says nothing about what you should. Those are separate questions, and the second one is about your own view, your time horizon and your risk tolerance — not about which famous names happen to be on offer.
Which stock is a smaller decision than how much of your money goes into it. Before buying anything off the list, run the amount through the Position Size Calculator so a familiar name doesn't lure you into an unfamiliar-sized bet.
Pulling it together: the mainstream US names are usually on Binance, ETFs sometimes too, but the roster is a living thing that shifts and varies by region — so the real answer to "which stocks" is always the live page, checked at the moment you look. Learn that ten-second habit and you'll never rely on a stale list again. For the full picture of how buying works once you've found your ticker, start with the complete guide to buying US stocks on Binance.
The region-specific list lives inside your account. Sign up with code BN771 for up to 20% off trading fees*. CoinVair is an independent Binance affiliate partner, not Binance official.
Sign up on Binance with BN771 →