Gram Is Live: How to Read 'prev. Toncoin' in Your Wallet
Your wallet now shows GRAM or 'Gram (prev. Toncoin)' where TON used to be? Here's what each label means, where your coins are, and how to confirm nothing moved.
- Author
- TON Adoption Team · research desk
- Published
You open Tonkeeper, MyTonWallet, or your Binance tab — and instead of the familiar TON, the screen now reads GRAM or a label like “Gram (prev. Toncoin)”. The first thought is natural: “Where are my coins?”
Relax. Your coins are exactly where you left them. This is not a hack, a bug, or a swapped balance. On 15 June 2026 the TON community completed the rebrand of its native coin: Toncoin officially reclaimed its historical name Gram, and the ticker changed from TON to GRAM — as reported by Phemex and Investing.com. The exact activation time differs per venue: Bitget, for example, announced it would pull the old TON pairs at 10:00 UTC and open the GRAM pairs at 12:00 UTC on 15 June. Your screen just caught up — for some people on the 15th, for others closer to 22 June.
This guide is for those whose label has already changed. If you’d rather see the forward-looking rollout schedule per app, we keep a separate tracker: when wallets and exchanges switch the TON ticker to Gram. This page is the after-the-fact “it’s already on my screen, what now” guide.
The short version
- Same coin. TON and GRAM are the same coin on the same address. Only the name and ticker changed.
- No swap needed. No migration, exchange, bridge or claim. A balance of 10 TON became 10 GRAM one-to-one — as confirmed by Investing.com, among others.
- The network is still TON. The blockchain is still called TON (The Open Network). It’s the coin that was renamed, not the chain.
How to read the new labels
Platforms use a few display variants during the transition. Here’s what each one means.
”Gram (prev. Toncoin)”
This is the recommended transitional format. The abbreviation prev. stands for previously. According to the integration guidance cited by CoinCentral and TradeInformer, platforms were asked to keep this dual label for a transition period so you recognise the coin by its old name. It’s normal, and it’s temporary.
This is already how CoinGecko and the Coinbase price page display the asset — both list the coin page as “Gram (prev. Toncoin)”.
Just “GRAM”
Some apps jumped straight to the clean ticker GRAM with no parenthetical. This is the final state the whole ecosystem is moving toward. If you already see bare GRAM, your app simply updated faster than the rest.
Still “TON”
This is also fine. Full consistency across wallets, exchanges and explorers is expected by 22 June 2026, per CoinCentral and TradeInformer. If your wallet or exchange still shows TON, it’s mid-update — no need to panic. By 22 June, logos, tickers, pair names, deposit/withdrawal labels and help-center pages should all catch up.
Confirm your balance is intact in 30 seconds
If you want to double-check, here’s a simple test that works in any wallet.
- Compare the coin count. However many TON you held before 15 June is how many GRAM you should hold now. There was no redenomination — the number wasn’t split or multiplied.
- Compare the address. Your wallet address didn’t change. Open it in an explorer (Tonviewer, Tonscan) — this is also how you find and verify your wallet address, where you’ll see the same balance under the new label.
- Check transaction history. Old incoming and outgoing transfers are still there; nothing went missing.
If all three line up, you’re fine. There’s nothing here that can technically break: our deep dive on why a swap to Gram isn’t needed explains that the coin never changed at the contract level.
Trading pairs: where did TONUSDT go
On exchanges, the ticker inside pairs changes too. The familiar TONUSDT becomes GRAMUSDT, TONUSDC becomes GRAMUSDC, and so on. If you’re used to searching pairs by the string “TON”, search for “GRAM” now.
Major venues have publicly committed to supporting the ticker change: Bybit, MEXC, and Bitget. Each exchange has its own exact activation timeline for the new pairs, so you may see GRAMUSDT on one venue before another — that’s expected.
A point for active traders: open orders, balances and trade history are not reset when the ticker flips. The pair’s label changes, not your position. If you’re unsure about a specific venue, our roundup of where Toncoin/Gram trades helps you get your bearings.
Watch out: GRAM ≠ GRM lookalikes
This is where vigilance actually matters. Riding the rebrand hype, coins with similar names show up in listings. In some aggregators, right next to the real Gram card, you may see a separate entry with the ticker GRM — a separate third-party jetton with no connection to the official rebrand, and not your coin.
The rule is simple: your coin is the renamed Toncoin under the GRAM ticker on the TON network, at the same address as before. If any app offers you a “new GRM token”, an “upgraded Gram”, or asks you to move something somewhere to “activate” it, that’s a textbook scam vector. To avoid confusing real Gram with similarly named tokens, keep this distinction handy: the Gram token vs the Gram jetton — same name, different nature.
Checklist: what to do right now
- Nothing urgent. The coin needs no transfer, swap or activation from you.
- Compare the count and address — it takes half a minute and kills the anxiety.
- Get used to searching pairs by “GRAM”, not “TON”, on exchanges.
- Ignore any “swap to Gram” or “new token” prompt — those are scams. A full holder action plan lives in what holders should do during the rebrand.
- Don’t worry if a friend already sees GRAM while you still see TON — mismatch during the transition window through 22 June is normal.
Bottom line
The switch from TON to GRAM, and the “Gram (prev. Toncoin)” label in your wallet or exchange, is a cosmetic rename — not an operation on your money. The coin, address, balance and transaction history are all unchanged. The only real action on your side is learning to recognise your coin under its new name and not falling for anyone who tries to “swap” something amid the confusion. For the broader context, start with our explainer on what the Toncoin-to-Gram rename actually means.
Frequently asked
Why does my wallet show Gram instead of Toncoin?
Where is my TON if the screen now says GRAM?
What does 'Gram (prev. Toncoin)' mean?
Do I need to do anything when I see the new ticker?
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