Price Prediction
NeutralCronos (CRO) Price Prediction
CRO benefits from Crypto.com's large exchange user base but carries governance and supply-credibility overhang after past reissuance controversy; catalysts are exchange growth and ETF or payments integrations.
By Dan Reyes · Updated Jul 8, 2026
Price targets by year
| Year | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $0.0400 | $0.0800 | $0.1500 |
| 2027 | $0.0500 | $0.1100 | $0.2500 |
| 2028 | $0.0600 | $0.1500 | $0.4000 |
Short term
CRO should trade with Crypto.com news flow, including any US listing, ETF or payments announcements.
Mid term
A rerating needs restored confidence in supply policy plus genuine on-chain usage beyond exchange incentives.
Long term
Long-run value depends on Cronos becoming a used settlement layer rather than an exchange loyalty token.
The case for Cronos
CRO is the native asset of Cronos, an EVM and Cosmos-compatible chain tied to the Crypto.com exchange and its tens of millions of users. Utility spans trading-fee discounts, staking, card rewards and gas on Cronos, giving the token a demand loop that pure infrastructure tokens lack. Renewed exchange marketing, US expansion and potential ETF and payments partnerships are the clearest catalysts.
The risks
Credibility is the core issue: a prior decision to restore previously burned tokens damaged trust in the fixed-supply narrative and showed governance can alter tokenomics. The price sits roughly 94% below its all-time high, reflecting that skepticism. CRO's value is closely coupled to a single centralized exchange, so regulatory action or business setbacks would hit it directly. On-chain activity remains modest relative to market capitalization.
Technical snapshot
RSI
Neutral (45)
Moving averages
Price below 200-day
Sentiment
Skeptical; recovering from supply-policy controversy
Frequently asked questions
Why did CRO's supply become controversial?
A governance decision restored tokens that had previously been burned, undermining the fixed-supply expectation and raising the risk that policy could change again. That precedent is a real risk to holders; this is information, not financial advice.
Is CRO dependent on Crypto.com?
Yes; much of its demand comes from exchange fee discounts and rewards, so regulatory or business problems at Crypto.com would weigh directly on the token. Diversification and position sizing matter given that concentration.
More price forecasts
Forecasts are scenarios, not advice or guarantees. Crypto is volatile and you can lose money. Disclaimer.