Live rankings of the 128 active Bittensor subnets, updated every 30 minutes from on-chain data. Three rankings — by market cap, by SubnetRadar health score, and by 24-hour price move — so you can see which subnets are biggest, healthiest, and moving the most right now.
The biggest subnets by total alpha value at TAO market price.
SubnetRadar's composite of emission share, dev activity, and validator distribution. Higher = more sustainable.
Biggest alpha-price gainers in the last 24 hours. Momentum, not quality — combine with the rankings above.
If you're new to Bittensor.
Picking a subnet to back is a function of three things: does the work matter, is the team shipping, and is the on-chain economy healthy. The first comes from reading the team's roadmap and recent updates. The second from SubnetRadar's GitHub Activity feed and dev signals. The third is what these tables show: market cap, liquidity, health score, and momentum.
For deeper context on a single subnet, every tile here links to its dedicated page with sparkline charts, health breakdown, smart-money clusters, and recent on-chain activity.
A Bittensor subnet is a specialised network of miners and validators that produces a specific type of machine intelligence — text generation, image synthesis, financial forecasting, code generation, and more. Each subnet has its own native token (alpha) and competes for a share of TAO emissions through the Yuma Consensus.
There are currently 128 active Bittensor subnets in 2026, each focused on a different domain of decentralised AI work.
Three signals matter most: (1) market cap and liquidity (deeper pools mean lower slippage when entering or exiting), (2) the SubnetRadar health score (combines emission share, dev activity, validator distribution), and (3) recent 24h and 7d moves to gauge momentum. Always combine on-chain data with the team's roadmap and recent code releases before committing capital.
Yes. You stake TAO into a subnet to receive its alpha token, which represents a position in that subnet's economy. The exchange happens through a constant-product pool unique to each subnet. Slippage and price impact depend on pool depth — use the SubnetRadar slippage calculator to estimate the cost of any specific size before committing.
dTAO (dynamic TAO) is the post-2025 Bittensor architecture where each subnet has its own market-priced alpha token. Validators and stakers choose where to allocate based on perceived subnet quality, and emissions flow proportionally to demand. dTAO replaced the previous fixed-allocation model with a market-driven system.