Burn Raydium LP Tokens on Solana
Burn Raydium LP tokens or CLMM positions from selected Raydium pools. Review the pool, LP balance, burn amount, withdrawal consequences, and wallet transaction details before signing.
Burning is different from removing liquidity. Need underlying assets back? Use Remove Liquidity instead. DEXArea is non-custodial: your wallet signs the transaction.
Connect your wallet, select a Raydium pool, and review the burn details. For AMM/CPMM, choose the LP token amount or percentage to burn. For CLMM, the form may require burning the full position NFT at once.
AMM v4 & CPMM
- LP amount or percentage to burn
CLMM
- Full position behavior — the form may require burning the CLMM position NFT 100% at once
About burning Raydium LP tokens
This tool supports burning LP tokens or CLMM position NFTs from selected Raydium AMM v4, CPMM, and CLMM pools. Burning destroys the selected LP token amount or CLMM position item and typically does not return underlying assets through the burn action.
For CLMM, the form may require burning the full position NFT at once. Use Remove Liquidity first if you need to withdraw pool assets where supported.
Test on Devnet
Use Devnet mode to test the burn flow before using Mainnet with real value. Devnet and Mainnet are separate; only Devnet pools and LP tokens work on Devnet.
When to Burn vs Remove
- Burn: Destroy LP tokens or a CLMM position item; you typically do not receive underlying assets through the burn action
- Remove: Withdraw your share of underlying pool assets to your wallet where supported
Important Notes
- Burning is usually irreversible and may affect future withdrawal ability
- You typically do not receive the underlying assets back through the burn action
- The selected LP tokens or CLMM position NFT are destroyed by the burn action
- Use Remove Liquidity instead if you want to withdraw underlying pool assets where supported
- CLMM: the form may require burning the full position NFT (100%) at once
Non-custodial signing
- Your wallet signs every transaction; DEXArea does not hold private keys.
- Review pool ID, LP balance, burn amount, and wallet transaction details before approving.
Resources
- What does burned liquidity mean?
Learn how LP token burns, CLMM positions, remove liquidity, and lock liquidity differ before signing.
- How to Remove Liquidity from Raydium
- Solana Liquidity Pools Explained for Token Creators
- Raydium AMM vs CPMM vs CLMM
- How to Create a Raydium Liquidity Pool
- How to Add Liquidity on Raydium
- Mint & Freeze Authority on Solana
- Solana Token Security Checklist
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Burn Liquidity Guide
Burn Liquidity vs Remove Liquidity
Burning liquidity destroys LP tokens or a CLMM position item. Removing liquidity withdraws the underlying assets when you still control the required LP receipt or position. If you want the assets back in your wallet, use Remove Liquidity instead of Burn Liquidity.
What Does This Tool Do?
DEXArea's Burn Liquidity tool helps you burn Raydium LP tokens or CLMM position NFTs from your wallet. The burn action typically destroys the selected LP receipt or position item and does not return the underlying assets through the burn action.
The tool supports selected Raydium AMM v4, CPMM, and CLMM setups on Mainnet and Devnet where available. Review compatibility, pool type, balance, burn amount, fees, and wallet transaction details before signing. Burning does not guarantee trust, price stability, demand, liquidity depth, or project quality.
AMM/CPMM LP Tokens vs CLMM Positions
AMM v4 and CPMM pools commonly use LP tokens that represent a pool share. CLMM pools commonly use position NFTs or position-style items tied to a selected liquidity range. The burn behavior and available amount controls can differ by pool type.
How to Burn Liquidity Step by Step
- Connect the wallet that holds the LP tokens or CLMM position.
- Select the correct network.
- Select or load the Raydium pool.
- Verify pool type, pool ID, token pair, and LP/position balance.
- For AMM/CPMM, choose amount or percentage.
- For CLMM, review whether the full position must be burned.
- Compare burn vs remove if you want underlying assets back.
- Review platform fee, network fee, and wallet transaction details.
- Sign in your wallet.
- Verify the result in the tool, wallet, explorer, or supported Raydium interface.
What to Check Before Signing
- Correct network
- Correct pool ID and token pair
- Pool type: AMM v4, CPMM, or CLMM
- LP token or CLMM position balance
- Burn amount or percentage
- Whether you intend to remove liquidity instead
- Whether the action may affect withdrawal ability later
- Platform fee and Solana network fee
- Wallet transaction details
This page explains a technical liquidity-management workflow. It is not financial, investment, legal, or tax advice.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does burning liquidity mean on Solana?
Is burning liquidity the same as removing liquidity?
No. Removing liquidity withdraws underlying pool assets when you still control the required LP receipt or position. Burning liquidity destroys LP tokens or a CLMM position item and may affect the ability to withdraw later.
What are Raydium LP tokens?
Raydium LP tokens are receipt tokens used by many AMM or CPMM pools to represent a pool share. They may be required to remove liquidity later. CLMM pools may use position NFTs instead of classic LP tokens. See Solana liquidity pools for token creators for background.
What is a CLMM position NFT?
A CLMM position NFT or position item represents liquidity placed in a concentrated liquidity pool, often tied to a price range. Burning it may remove the item used to manage or close that position, depending on pool behavior and tool support. See Raydium pool types.
What happens when I burn Raydium LP tokens?
The selected LP tokens or CLMM position item are destroyed. You typically do not receive the underlying assets back through the burn action. Pool behavior depends on pool type, burn amount, and position structure.
Can burned LP tokens be recovered?
Usually no. Burned LP tokens or CLMM position items generally cannot be restored. Treat burning as usually irreversible unless the live transaction preview and pool behavior clearly show otherwise.
Does burning liquidity lock liquidity forever?
Not always. Burning may remove your ability to withdraw through those LP tokens or that CLMM position, but the exact effect depends on pool type, burn amount, and pool structure. Do not assume every burn locks all pool liquidity forever.
Does burning liquidity guarantee token trust?
No. Burning liquidity does not guarantee trust, price stability, demand, trading volume, or project quality. It also does not revoke mint authority, freeze authority, or make metadata immutable via make immutable.
Does burning liquidity affect token supply?
Burning LP tokens or a CLMM position item does not by itself change the token mint supply. It affects the liquidity receipt or position, not the token mint authority.
Do I need to own the LP tokens to burn them?
Yes. Your connected wallet must hold the LP tokens or CLMM position item you intend to burn. DEXArea is non-custodial: your wallet signs the transaction, and DEXArea does not hold your private keys.
Should I remove liquidity instead of burning it?
Use Remove Liquidity if you want underlying pool assets back in your wallet where supported. Use Burn Liquidity only when you intentionally want to destroy LP tokens or a CLMM position item without withdrawing those assets through the burn action. See how to remove liquidity from Raydium.
Can I burn liquidity without coding?
Yes. DEXArea provides a no-code Burn Liquidity workflow. Connect your wallet, select the pool, review the LP balance or CLMM position, check fees and consequences, then sign in your wallet. A DEXArea platform fee and Solana network fees may apply.
Can I test burning liquidity before Mainnet?
Use Devnet mode to test the burn flow before using Mainnet with real value, where supported. Devnet and Mainnet are separate, so only Devnet pools and LP tokens work on Devnet.
Is this financial advice?
No. This page explains a technical liquidity-management workflow. It is not financial, investment, legal, or tax advice.
