DeFi trading suite MaestroBots added support for PancakeSwap Infinity CL pools on May 22, 2026, with both PancakeSwap and MaestroBots announcing the integration through official X posts. The update lets users trade PancakeSwap Infinity concentrated liquidity pools on BNB Chain and Base directly through the Maestro bot, according to the two announcements.
The active integration is narrower than the full PancakeSwap Infinity feature set. Based on the official posts, MaestroBots now supports trading Infinity CL pools through its Telegram-based execution interface; the announcements do not independently confirm that users can create Infinity pools, deploy hooks, manage LP positions or configure custom curves from inside MaestroBots.
PancakeSwap Infinity CL pools on @BNBCHAIN and @base are now live in @MaestroBots, bringing concentrated liquidity, dynamic fees, and lower gas costs.
Sharper execution on Maestro. 🫡 https://t.co/Pim9ZKaZYv
— PancakeSwap (@PancakeSwap) May 22, 2026
Infinity CL Trading Moves Into MaestroBots
PancakeSwap Infinity is the latest version of PancakeSwap’s AMM architecture, described in its documentation as a modular system built to make decentralized trading faster, cheaper and more flexible. The documentation lists singleton architecture, flash accounting, hooks, native token support, custom pricing curves and ERC-6909 accounting among the broader Infinity features.
For this MaestroBots rollout, the supported user-facing function is access to Infinity CL pool trading on BNB Chain and Base. PancakeSwap’s public post frames the integration as bringing concentrated liquidity, dynamic fees and lower gas costs into the bot, while MaestroBots similarly promotes trading those pools directly from its interface. Those remain platform claims about the supported trading route, not audited performance results for every transaction.
The underlying Infinity design explains why those claims matter. PancakeSwap’s developer documentation says the CLAMM model allows liquidity providers to offer assets within specific price ranges, which is intended to enhance capital efficiency and deepen liquidity for traders. That is a design objective of concentrated liquidity, not a guaranteed outcome for every pool or market condition.
Gas and Execution Claims Remain Design-Based
PancakeSwap’s documentation says Infinity uses flash accounting to help reduce gas fees during complex transactions such as multi-hop swaps and liquidity changes. It also describes singleton architecture as a design that can make pool creation and multi-hop swaps cheaper by reducing unnecessary token transfers. In this context, lower gas fees should be read as a protocol-design claim, not as proof that MaestroBots will always deliver cheaper execution.
Infinity’s broader architecture also supports hooks and custom pricing curves, but those features sit at the protocol and pool-design level. PancakeSwap documentation says hooks can run logic at key points in a pool’s lifecycle and support use cases such as custom oracles, dynamic fee pools and advanced liquidity management. The MaestroBots announcements do not state that hook deployment or custom pool design is available through the bot.
PancakeSwap Infinity itself launched on April 28, 2025, according to PancakeSwap’s official blog, with BNB Chain as the starting point and later expansion to Base. The MaestroBots integration therefore adds a third-party execution layer for already supported Infinity CL trading, rather than launching the Infinity protocol for the first time.
For traders, the practical impact is access: MaestroBots users can now route PancakeSwap Infinity CL pool trades on BNB Chain and Base through a Telegram-based workflow. The broader benefits around capital efficiency, dynamic fees and gas optimization remain features and claims of the Infinity design, while real execution costs, slippage and trade quality will still depend on pool liquidity, routing, network conditions and the specific transaction path.
