Sam Altman’s Worldcoin cuts WLD unlocks by 43% but 4.9B tokens still need to prove demand

Worldcoin said earlier this year that the WLD unlock rate will drop by 43% on July 24 under existing schedules.

It also said 4.9 billion WLD, equal to 49% of the token’s 10 billion total supply, was already unlocked as of Apr. 10, with 3.3 billion WLD in circulation. That makes the upcoming July cut less a fresh supply shock than a market check on whether slower new emissions can matter when nearly half the supply is already unlocked.

WLD now has a test of whether slower emissions can coincide with durable demand once so much supply has already been unlocked.

CryptoSlate’s WLD market page showed the token trading near $0.38 on July 9, with a market capitalization of about $1.34 billion and a 24-hour trading volume of about $192 million.

At that level, the market is pricing whether World ID can become a source of recurring token utility.

What changes on July 24

World’s scheduled drop cuts the daily rate at which WLD unlocks across both community- and insider-linked allocations, with daily unlocks on a linear schedule and no cliff.

| Allocation | Before July 24 | After July 24 | Change | | --- | --- | --- | --- | | World Community tokens | 3.2 million WLD per day | 1.6 million WLD per day | Down 50% | | TFH investor and team tokens | 1.9 million WLD per day | 1.3 million WLD per day | Down 32% | | Aggregate unlock rate | About 5.1 million WLD per day | About 2.9 million WLD per day | Down 43% |

Infographic showing WLD daily unlock rate falling 43% on July 24, 2026, with 4.9 billion WLD unlocked by April 10 and demand tests for World ID.Infographic showing Worldcoin’s daily unlock rate dropping 43% on July 24, from 5.1M to 2.9M WLD, with 49% of supply already unlockedThe reduction is equivalent to roughly 2.2 million WLD per day, which is about 803 million fewer WLD entering unlock schedules over a full year.

For a token with a total supply of 10 billion, the change is large enough to alter daily supply pressure.

Daily emissions shape how much fresh supply must be absorbed by buyers, market makers, and long-term holders, and a lower future unlock rate leaves already-unlocked supply in place.

World’s own Apr. 10 figures put unlocked supply at 4.9 billion WLD before the July slowdown arrived, making the tension between a slower future drip and an already-large unlocked base.

CryptoSlate’s market data showed about 3.52 billion WLD circulating on July 8, compared with World’s Apr. 10 statement that 3.3 billion WLD was in circulation at the time.

A larger unlocked pool lies outside the most restrictive framing of circulating supply, reducing future pressure at the margin, which is why the July 24 supply cut needs a demand proof before it can be treated as bullish.

The next step is to answer who buys WLD, why they hold it, or what recurring activity creates token demand after the flow slows, to change the long-term demand curve.

As of now, World’s answer is in formation, with the protocol arguing that World ID can become infrastructure for the internet’s proof-of-human problem.

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Proof-of-human becoming paid infrastructure

World’s strongest demand-side argument now is that applications may eventually pay for proof-of-human infrastructure in ways that route value back through the protocol.

In an Apr. 16 post on World ID’s revenue potential, World said that applications could pay World ID fees while end users remain free.

It also said tokens are ultimately used to pay all fees, and that protocol fees could be allocated to network operations or token burns, which is the most important bridge between identity adoption and WLD demand.

If platforms pay for World ID proofs, those payments settle through token-based mechanisms, and fees become recurring, then the token can point to demand beyond emissions, grants, and speculative positioning.

In an Apr. 17 post introducing the new World ID, it said World Network participants span 160 countries and that nearly 18 million people have verified their humanness at an Orb.

The same post framed World ID as proof-of-human infrastructure for consumer platforms, enterprise applications, and AI agents.

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World said in a separate Apr. 17 post that Zoom and DocuSign are integrating proof-of-human use cases, with Outtake and a VanEck-linked beta also cited.

Those integrations move the narrative from crypto-native distribution toward proving that a real person is behind an action in a world of deepfakes, bots, and AI agents.

The evidence needed after July 24 is fee volume, token-settled usage, recurring application demand, or clear disclosures that World ID activity is reducing WLD’s effective supply through burns or other mechanisms.

Lower emissions can improve the setup, and proof of human adoption becoming economically visible will make the market treat WLD as a token with real utility.

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Privacy scrutiny is still part of the demand test

World’s identity pitch also carries the constraint that the product depends on trust in biometric data handling.

Spain’s data protection authority (AEPD) ordered Tools for Humanity in March 2024 to stop collecting and processing personal data in Spain as part of Sam Altman’s Worldcoin project, citing complaints including insufficient information, collection of minors’ data, and limits on withdrawing consent.

It also said biometric data receives special protection under the GDPR because of its sensitive nature.

In February 2026, the AEPD said it had warned Tools for Humanity about the planned restart of World activity in Spain and that the company had communicated its intent to temporarily postpone the relaunch to review the issues raised.

The regulator said the intended processing appeared to involve biometric data for iris identification and facial authentication and required justification through a data-protection impact assessment.

Germany’s Bavarian State Office for Data Protection Supervision also said in December 2024 that it had concluded an investigation into Worldcoin’s biometric data processing by issuing corrective measures.

The authority said the company would be required to provide a GDPR-compliant deletion procedure and that the results had to be followed throughout Europe when processing personal data.

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Regulatory friction affects the demand case because World depends on platforms, users, and jurisdictions accepting proof-of-human infrastructure at scale.

World has emphasized privacy architecture to address regulatory challenges, with its April product posts describing zero-knowledge proofs, one-time-use nullifiers, and systems meant to avoid exposing or storing personal data.

The market question is whether those assurances, product changes, and enterprise integrations are enough to change World’s public narrative from biometric controversy to paid identity infrastructure.

Demand is the next test for Worldcoin

The July 24 change reduces the WLD daily unlock rate, clarifies that there is no cliff, gives traders a hard date to watch, and makes the demand gap easier to see.

If WLD strengthens after the cut, the more convincing signal would be a combination of stable liquidity, better price action, and evidence that World ID usage is becoming fee-generating infrastructure.

If the token fades, the market will have effectively said that the already-unlocked supply base and uncertainty around real token demand still outweigh slower emissions.

The July 24 reduction matters, and it still needs demand confirmation.

Worldcoin’s harder test starts after the supply headline passes, when investors can judge whether proof-of-human adoption is turning into durable WLD demand or whether the token is still carrying the weight of an already-large unlocked float.

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