Liquidity
In this section we explain every advanced filter found under the LIQUIDITY tab. Use these notes as a quick reference to understand exactly what each setting does and how to apply it in practice.

Below you’ll find a concise explanation for every filter under the MARKET tab, plus practical examples so you can see exactly how each one works.
Liquidity Must Be Greater Than • What it does: Keeps only tokens whose current liquidity pool (LP) value is above the amount you enter. Use it to avoid ultra-illiquid tokens that are hard to trade. • Example: Enter 10 000 → only tokens with more than $10 000 locked in liquidity will pass.
Liquidity Must Be Less Than • What it does: Keeps only tokens whose LP value is below the number you specify—handy when you’re targeting small, early-stage projects. • Example: Enter 500 000 → tokens with under $500 000 in liquidity will pass; anything higher will be filtered out.
Liquidity Locked • What it does: Allows through only tokens whose liquidity is currently locked (LP tokens are held in a lock contract or vesting schedule). This reduces the risk of sudden liquidity removal. • Example: Toggle ON → every passing token must have its LP tokens locked; unlocked liquidity is excluded.
Liquidity Lock Must Be at Least • What it does: Sets a minimum lock duration (in days). Tokens must have liquidity locked for longer than the value you enter. • Example: Enter 30 → only tokens with liquidity locked for more than 30 days will pass.
Liquidity Lock Must Be Less Than • What it does: Sets a maximum lock duration (in days). Tokens with liquidity locked for shorter than this value will pass—useful if you prefer locks that expire soon. • Example: Enter 365 → tokens whose liquidity is locked for less than 365 days will pass; longer locks are excluded.
Tip: Combine these liquidity filters with your Market and Meta filters to target tokens that have both healthy liquidity and solid fundamentals.
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