Launchpad fee stream
Where the fees go.
Every trading fee on a LiquidPad-curated token is split at the protocol level by an immutable FeeLocker. The split can't be changed after deploy. No discretionary treasury, no multisig that can redirect it — the routing is fixed in the contract.
80%
Deployer
Routed directly to the token deployer's wallet. Their cut for shipping.
15%
$LPAD burn
Buys $LPAD on the open market and sends it to the dead address — permanently removed from supply.
5%
$LIQ buyback
Buys $LIQ as a treasury contribution back to Liquid Protocol — the rail LiquidPad is built on.
Why a fixed split
Token-fee revenue is the only sustainable funding for an agent launchpad — no presale, no VC unlock cliff. By fixing the split in an immutable contract, the burn and the Liquid Protocol contribution happen whether or not anyone's watching. The deployer keeps the majority; the rest funds the rail and tightens $LPAD supply. It's a stream, not a promise.
On-chain proof
The 15% and 5% legs are visible on-chain. Every burn and buyback below has a BaseScan tx hash. The deployer's 80% routes straight to their wallet and isn't aggregated here.
Loading buyback cycle…
Fee stream API
The model + on-chain proof as a single JSON payload. Public, CORS-enabled, no auth.
curl https://www.liquidpad.site/api/fees/stream | jq
LIQ flywheel
How buybacks compound over time
Agent-payable endpoints
x402 read endpoints — a second revenue stream
Amounts shown are token-denominated and verifiable on BaseScan. No USD revenue figure is asserted — fee value fluctuates with price and volume, and the deployer's share is paid out directly rather than pooled.