The Pump.fun bonding curve, explained as a waveform

A Pump.fun token does not launch with a seeded liquidity pool or an order book. Its price comes from a fixed mathematical curve that maps supply to price: every buy pushes the price up the curve, every sell slides it back down. This page explains how that curve works, how price discovery happens without a liquidity provider, what graduation to Raydium actually changes, and why the migration is the moment your volume waveform is most likely to go quiet.

By Kristjan Kask, Owlence Labs · Updated 12 Jul 2026

What is the Pump.fun bonding curve?

The Pump.fun bonding curve is a fixed formula that sets a token's price directly from how much of its supply has been bought. Each purchase moves the price up along the curve; each sale moves it down. There is no traditional order book and no liquidity provider at launch - the curve itself is the counterparty, so anyone can buy or sell against it instantly.

Think of the curve as a rule written into the contract before anyone trades: for a given amount of supply already sold, the next unit costs exactly this much. Because the relationship is predefined, price is a pure function of how far along the curve the token has travelled. Early buyers move a nearly empty curve and pay less; buyers arriving later are pushing against a curve that has already climbed.

The important consequence is that there is no waiting for a match. On an order book you need a seller for every buyer; on a bonding curve the contract mints or returns tokens at the curve price on demand. That is what lets a brand-new token trade the instant it is created, with no market maker seeding the pair.

How Pump.fun uses the curve at launch

At launch Pump.fun uses the curve for price discovery without any seeded liquidity. Instead of a founder funding a pool, the curve provides both the price and the ability to transact. Anyone can buy against it - which raises the price - or sell back into it, and the shape of those trades along the curve is the first thing the market sees.

This solves the cold-start problem that kills most token launches. Normally a new token needs someone to deposit real value into a pool before the first trade can happen; on Pump.fun the curve stands in for that pool. A creator can ship a token with nothing but the contract, and the very first buyer transacts against the curve rather than against another person.

Because the entry cost is so low, the launch window is crowded and fast. Dozens of tokens can be moving up their curves at once, and traders scan for the ones showing genuine, spaced activity rather than a single wallet nudging the price. That reading of the curve - the pattern of buys and sells over the first minutes - is the signal the trending feed and passing traders react to.

Graduation: when the curve migrates to Raydium

A token graduates when enough of its bonding curve has been bought out to hit the threshold set by Pump.fun. At that point the token leaves the curve and its liquidity migrates into a Raydium pool. From then on price is set by that pool and normal AMM trading, not by the fixed curve - the launch phase is over and the token trades like any other Raydium pair.

Graduation is the curve reaching the top of its designed range. As buyers work through the supply the price has climbed the whole way; once the buy-out threshold is met, the accumulated value on the curve is used to open a real liquidity pool on Raydium. The token is no longer priced by a formula - it is priced by supply and demand in that pool.

This is a genuine change of venue, not just a label. Before graduation the counterparty is the curve; after it, the counterparty is other traders in the Raydium pool. Understanding that handover matters because it is where a lot of momentum is won or lost, and where volume strategy has to change gears. The dedicated Raydium volume bot guide covers the post-graduation venue in depth.

What graduation means for volume timing

The migration is a natural break point where trading can stall at the worst possible moment. The token changes venue just as graduation draws new eyes, and if activity pauses during the handover the chart flatlines right when attention peaks. Keeping the waveform running through migration - with an automatic handoff onto Raydium - preserves the shape you built on the curve.

Everything about a graduating token pulls attention toward it: it cleared the curve, it hit the front of feeds, new traders arrive to look. The problem is that the same moment moves the token to a new pool, and any campaign or activity built around the curve does not automatically continue on Raydium. Left alone, the chart goes quiet during the handover - a dead patch exactly when the most people are watching.

Treating migration as a seam to plan around, rather than an event that happens to you, is the whole point. A Raydium auto-handoff keeps volume flowing across the boundary so the waveform you shaped on the curve does not reset to a flat line on the other side. The volume guide walks through carrying momentum through that transition step by step.

Reading the curve as a waveform

The curve fixes what a trade costs, but the shape of buys and sells along it is what traders and the feed actually read. A believable token shows spaced, varied activity climbing the curve; a single wallet nudging price or one vertical wall reads as manufactured. The waveform is that pattern of movement, and it is the layer humans and algorithms interpret.

Two tokens can sit at the same point on their curves and tell completely different stories. One got there through a steady, irregular flow of buys from many wallets; the other through a single address firing repeatedly. The curve does not distinguish them, but the market does - the second one looks staged. Price is set by the formula; credibility is set by the waveform.

That is why it helps to see the curve as a live signal rather than a static number. The rhythm, amplitude and direction of trades along it are what the trending algorithm and human traders scan during the launch window. If any of the terms here are new, the Solana memecoin glossary defines the bonding curve, graduation, liquidity migration and the rest in one place.

Frequently asked questions

Does the bonding curve guarantee my token goes up?
No. The curve only defines the mechanical relationship between supply and price - each buy raises it, each sell lowers it. Whether buyers actually arrive is set by demand, attention and everything else launching at the same time. The curve is the pricing rule, not a promise of direction.
What triggers a Pump.fun token to graduate?
Graduation happens when enough of the bonding curve has been bought out to reach the threshold Pump.fun sets. At that point the token leaves the curve and its accumulated liquidity migrates into a Raydium pool, after which price is set by that pool rather than by the fixed curve.
Why does volume often stall at migration?
Because the token changes venue. Activity built around the bonding curve does not automatically continue in the new Raydium pool, so without a handoff the chart can go quiet during the handover - exactly when graduation is drawing the most new eyes.
Is the bonding curve the same as a liquidity pool?
No. Before graduation there is no seeded pool; the curve itself is the counterparty and price comes from a fixed formula. A real Raydium liquidity pool only exists after the token graduates, and from then on price is set by supply and demand in that pool.