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Helium's Burn-and-Mint Equilibrium: How Economic Fundamentals Are Reshaping DePIN Wireless Networks

· 14 min read
Dora Noda
Software Engineer

When Helium's daily Data Credit burns surged 196.6% quarter-over-quarter to reach $30,920 in Q3 2025, it signaled something more significant than just network growth. It marked the moment when a decentralized physical infrastructure network (DePIN) shifted from token-incentive-driven expansion to genuine economic demand. Combined with April 2025's SEC lawsuit dismissal establishing that HNT tokens are not securities, Helium's Burn-and-Mint Equilibrium (BME) model is proving that community-powered wireless infrastructure can compete with traditional telecoms on fundamentals, not just hype.

With over 600,000 subscribers, 115,750 hotspots providing coverage, and $18.3 million in annualized revenue, Helium represents the most mature test case for whether DePIN economics can sustain long-term growth. The answer increasingly looks like "yes"—but the path reveals critical lessons about tokenomics, regulatory clarity, and the transition from speculation to utility.

What is Burn-and-Mint Equilibrium?

Burn-and-Mint Equilibrium is a tokenomic mechanism that ties network usage directly to token supply dynamics. In Helium's implementation, the model works as follows:

The Burn Side: When users need Data Credits (DCs) to access Helium's wireless network, they must burn HNT tokens, permanently removing them from circulation. DCs are the utility currency consumed for data transmission on the network.

The Mint Side: The network mints new HNT tokens according to a fixed emission schedule, with halvings reducing new issuance over time (the next halving occurred in 2025).

The Equilibrium: As network demand increases and more HNT is burned for DCs, the deflationary burn pressure can offset or exceed the inflationary mint pressure, creating net-negative token issuance. This mechanism aligns token holder incentives with actual network utility rather than speculative growth.

The BME model has become influential beyond Helium. According to research from Messari, DePIN projects like Akash Network and Render Network have implemented similar designs, recognizing that linking token economics to verifiable network usage creates more sustainable growth than pure liquidity mining or staking rewards.

How Helium's BME Works in Practice

Helium's practical implementation of BME creates a three-sided marketplace:

  1. Hotspot Operators: Deploy and maintain 5G/IoT wireless infrastructure, earning HNT and subDAO tokens (MOBILE for 5G, IOT for LoRaWAN networks) based on coverage and data transfer.

  2. Network Users: Purchase connectivity through Helium Mobile subscriptions or IoT data plans, with revenues converted to DC burns.

  3. Token Holders: Benefit from deflationary pressure as network usage scales, while governance participation shapes subDAO economics.

The genius of this system is that it distributes both capital expenditures and operational costs across thousands of independent operators, creating what DePIN Wireless describes as a "permissionless, community-powered alternative to traditional telecom infrastructure."

Recent data validates the mechanism's effectiveness. In Q1 2025, Helium Mobile hotspots increased 12.5% QoQ from 28,100 to 31,600. By Q3 2025, the network reached 115,750 hotspots, an 18% QoQ increase. When converted non-Helium hardware is included, totals exceeded 121,000 hotspots.

More critically, subscriber growth accelerated dramatically. From 461,500 subscribers at the end of Q3 2025, the network reached over 602,400 by mid-December, marking a roughly 30% increase in under three months. The network now supports nearly 2 million daily active users.

The SEC Lawsuit Dismissal: Regulatory Clarity for DePIN

On April 10, 2025, the Securities and Exchange Commission formally requested dismissal of its lawsuit against Nova Labs, Helium's creator, marking a watershed moment for DePIN regulatory clarity.

What the SEC Originally Alleged

The SEC's April 23, 2025 complaint alleged that Nova Labs made materially false and misleading statements to prospective equity investors about companies like Lime, Nestlé, and Salesforce purportedly using the Helium Network when those companies were not actually network users. The agency claimed violations of Section 17(a)(2) of the Securities Act of 1933.

The Settlement Terms

Nova Labs agreed to pay $200,000 to settle the accusation without admitting wrongdoing. Critically, the final judgment only addressed the private equity placement misrepresentation claims—not whether HNT tokens themselves constituted securities.

The Precedent-Setting Outcome

The SEC dismissed the case with prejudice, meaning it cannot bring similar charges against Nova Labs in the future regarding the same conduct. More significantly, the dismissal established that:

  • Helium Hotspots and the distribution of HNT, MOBILE, and IOT tokens through the Helium Network are not securities
  • Selling hardware and distributing tokens for network growth does not automatically make them securities
  • This decision sets a precedent for how regulators consider similar DePIN projects

As DePIN Scan reported, the ruling "potentially removes legal uncertainty over how regulators consider similar decentralized physical infrastructure networks."

For the broader DePIN sector, this clarity is transformative. Projects deploying physical infrastructure—whether wireless networks, storage systems, or computing grids—now have a clearer regulatory pathway, assuming they avoid misleading statements to investors and maintain genuine utility-driven token models.

Network Growth Metrics: From Hype to Fundamentals

The maturation of Helium's economics is visible in how revenue composition has evolved. The network implemented a critical change: burning 100% of revenue for Data Credits, directly linking HNT token utility to genuine network activity rather than speculative trading.

Revenue and Burn Metrics

The results speak for themselves:

Strategic Partnerships Driving Adoption

Helium's growth isn't happening in isolation. The network has secured partnerships with major carriers including AT&T and Telefónica, effectively creating a hybrid model that combines decentralized hotspot coverage with traditional telecom backhaul.

By early 2026, Helium Mobile matured its plan structure around two core offerings:

  • Air Plan: $15/month for 10GB of data
  • Infinity Plan: $30/month for unlimited data

This pricing undercuts traditional carriers by 50-70% while maintaining coverage through the community-built network supplemented by partner infrastructure.

The Coverage Equation

Traditional telecom infrastructure requires massive capital expenditures. A single 5G cell tower can cost $150,000-$500,000 to deploy and thousands per month to operate. Helium's model distributes this cost across independent operators who earn HNT and MOBILE tokens, creating economic incentives for coverage expansion without centralized capital deployment.

The model isn't perfect—coverage gaps persist, and reliance on partner networks for ubiquitous service creates hybrid economics. But the trajectory suggests Helium is solving the "chicken-and-egg" problem that killed previous decentralized wireless attempts: sufficient coverage to attract users, sufficient users to justify coverage expansion.

Economic Reality Check: Revenue vs Token Rewards

The harsh truth for many DePIN projects in 2026 is that token rewards must eventually align with real revenue. As industry analysis notes, "Early DePIN growth was often driven by token rewards rather than service demand. By 2026, that model is no longer sufficient."

The Brutal Math

Networks with weak real-world usage face an unsustainable equation:

  • If token rewards > real revenue → inflation and participant churn
  • If token rewards < real revenue → deflationary pressure and sustainable growth

Helium appears to be crossing the inflection point toward the latter category. With $18.3 million in annualized revenue and accelerating DC burn rates, the network is generating genuine economic activity beyond token speculation.

Hotspot Economics in 2026

For individual hotspot operators, the economics have become more nuanced. Early Helium hotspot owners in high-demand areas earned substantial HNT rewards during the network's growth phase. In 2026, earnings depend heavily on:

  • Location: Urban areas with high user density generate more data transfer and DC burns
  • Coverage quality: Reliable uptime and strong signal strength increase earnings
  • Network type: MOBILE (5G) hotspots in subscriber-dense areas can significantly outperform IOT (LoRaWAN) deployments

The shift from "deploy anywhere and earn" to "strategic placement matters" represents maturation—a sign that market forces are optimizing network topology rather than token incentives alone.

2026 Price Predictions and Market Outlook

Analyst predictions for HNT in 2026 vary widely, reflecting uncertainty about how quickly network fundamentals will translate to token value:

Conservative Projections

  • Analytical forecasts suggest HNT may reach $1.54-$1.58 by end of 2026
  • For February 2026, maximum trading around $1.40, with potential minimum of $1.26

Moderate Scenarios

  • Some analysts see HNT ranging between $2.50-$3.00 for much of the year
  • This aligns with steady subscriber growth and revenue scaling

Bullish Cases

  • Conservative bullish models project $4-$8 for 2026
  • Optimistic scenarios suggest $10-$20 if network adoption accelerates

Very Bullish Outliers

The wide range reflects genuine uncertainty. HNT's price will likely depend on several key drivers:

  1. Subscriber Growth Trajectory: Can Helium Mobile maintain 30%+ quarterly growth?
  2. Revenue Scaling: Will DC burns continue accelerating as usage deepens?
  3. Competitive Pressure: How do traditional carriers respond to Helium's pricing?
  4. Token Supply Dynamics: When does burn rate sustainably exceed mint rate?

The World Economic Forum's projection of a $3.5 trillion DePIN opportunity by 2028 provides macro tailwinds, but Helium's capture rate within that market remains speculative.

What This Means for the Broader DePIN Sector

Helium's evolution from speculative token project to revenue-generating infrastructure network provides a template for the entire DePIN sector.

The Fundamental Shift

As Sarson Funds analysis notes, "As DePIN transitions into its enterprise phase in 2026, the projects that can provide verifiable performance, scalable infrastructure, and operational trust will lead the next growth cycle."

This means DePIN projects must demonstrate:

  • Real revenue generation, not just token emissions
  • Verifiable infrastructure utility, not just network participant counts
  • Sustainable unit economics where service revenue can eventually support participant rewards

Competition and Differentiation

Helium faces competition from both traditional telecoms and other DePIN wireless projects like Pollen Mobile. However, comparative analysis shows Helium maintains the largest decentralized physical infrastructure network by geographic coverage.

The first-mover advantage matters, but only if execution continues. Networks that fail to convert token-incentivized growth into genuine customer adoption will face the "brutal math" of unsustainable emissions.

Lessons for Other DePIN Categories

The Burn-and-Mint Equilibrium model has influenced other DePIN sectors:

  • Decentralized Storage: Filecoin and Arweave use similar burn mechanisms for storage payments
  • Compute Networks: Render Network adopted BME for GPU rendering credits
  • Data Availability: Celestia implements burns for rollup data posting

The common thread: linking token utility to measurable, verifiable network usage rather than abstract staking yields or liquidity mining rewards.

Challenges Ahead

Despite positive momentum, Helium faces significant challenges:

Technical and Operational Hurdles

  1. Coverage Reliability: Decentralized infrastructure inherently varies in quality and uptime
  2. Partner Dependency: Reliance on AT&T/T-Mobile roaming creates centralization risks
  3. Scaling Economics: Can hotspot operator incentives remain attractive as competition increases?

Market Dynamics

  1. Carrier Response: What happens if traditional telecoms aggressively price-compete?
  2. Regulatory Evolution: Will FCC or international regulators impose new compliance requirements?
  3. Token Price Volatility: How do participant incentives hold up during extended bear markets?

The ROI Question for New Hotspot Operators

Early Helium hotspot deployers benefited from high token rewards and low competition. In 2026, potential operators face longer payback periods and higher location sensitivity. The network must continue growing user density to maintain attractive economics for infrastructure providers.

Conclusion: From Experimentation to Execution

Helium's Burn-and-Mint Equilibrium represents more than clever tokenomics—it's a test of whether decentralized infrastructure can deliver real-world utility at scale. With the SEC lawsuit dismissed, regulatory clarity established, and network growth accelerating from 600,000 to potentially millions of subscribers, the evidence increasingly supports the affirmative case.

The 196.6% surge in DC burns signals that users are paying for connectivity, not just speculating on tokens. The $18.3 million in annualized revenue demonstrates genuine economic activity. The 115,750 hotspots prove community-powered infrastructure deployment can reach meaningful scale.

But 2026 will be the critical year. Can Helium maintain subscriber growth momentum while improving coverage quality? Will DC burn rates continue accelerating as usage deepens? Can the BME model achieve sustained net-negative issuance where burns exceed mints?

For the broader DePIN sector valued at a projected $3.5 trillion by 2028, Helium's answers to these questions will shape investment theses across decentralized storage, compute, energy, and infrastructure categories.

The transition from hype to fundamentals is underway. The networks that survive won't be those with the best token incentives—they'll be those with the best products.

For builders developing DePIN infrastructure or applications requiring decentralized wireless connectivity, understanding Helium's BME economics and network coverage can inform strategic decisions about where community-powered infrastructure makes technical and economic sense versus traditional providers.


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