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T TON Adoption
Basics GUIDE · 2026

.ton domains: how to register, sell and use them in 2026

A complete guide to TON DNS: dns.ton.org auctions, prices, 0.015 TON renewal, NFT-domains, selling on Fragment and getgems.io, and Telegram usernames.

Author
TON Adoption Team · research desk
Published
6 min read

.ton is the native domain naming system of the TON network. Each name lives as an NFT on-chain, can be sold, gifted, attached to a wallet address or to a website. By 2026 the .ton ecosystem has become one of the most liquid NFT segments on TON: short names sell for tens of thousands of dollars, while a regular medium-length registration still costs 1 TON.

This guide is for anyone who wants to register a domain for themselves or simply understand how the market works.

Why .ton matters

Technically a .ton domain solves three things:

  1. Human-readable address. Instead of EQDrjaLahLkMB-hMCmkzOyBuHJ139ZUYmPHu6RRBKnbdLIYI you write durov.ton. Wallets and DEXes resolve the name to an address automatically.
  2. A site on TON Sites. A domain can point to an ADNL address of a TON node, and the site becomes accessible through TON Proxy — without classic DNS, without traditional hosting.
  3. Identity. A .ton name is a unique public identifier that’s harder to steal than a @username (because Telegram usernames are a separate product — don’t confuse them).

Beyond utility, it’s also a speculative asset. Short, snappy names (a.ton, tg.ton, eth.ton) are a real NFT category with sizeable trades.

How registration works

Every .ton domain is allocated through a public auction at dns.ton.org. There’s no centralised registrar — a smart contract on TON accepts bids and decides the winner.

The rules:

  • The name must be between 4 and 126 characters. Names shorter than 4 are unavailable (to avoid clashing with regular domains).
  • Starting price depends on length:
    • 11+ characters — from 1 TON;
    • 10 characters — from 100 TON;
    • 9 characters — from 300 TON;
    • 8 characters — from 1,000 TON;
    • and so on, scaling for shorter names.
  • Auctions last 7 days from the first bid.
  • Each new bid must be at least 5% higher than the previous one.
  • Whoever placed the last bid at auction end wins.

If no one bids above the starting price within 7 days, no auction triggers and the name stays unavailable.

Buying a domain step by step

Registration takes 5–10 minutes plus a 7-day auction wait.

Step 1. Visit dns.ton.org

Open dns.ton.org in any browser (desktop or mobile — same thing). Connect a wallet via TON Connect (Tonkeeper, MyTonWallet, any compatible wallet).

Step 2. Search for a name

Type the desired name without .ton into search. The site shows:

  • whether the name is free;
  • if taken — the owner and the renewal date;
  • the starting auction price.

Step 3. Place a bid

If the name is free — click “Place a bid”, choose an amount (minimum is the starting price), confirm in the wallet. Gas is the standard TON few cents.

The first bid starts a 7-day clock. During that time anyone can outbid you (minimum +5%). If outbid, your stake returns automatically — no loss.

Step 4. Wait for the auction to end

After 7 days without further bids the name is yours. The NFT-domain arrives at your address — it now appears in the wallet as a regular NFT.

Step 5. Configure the bindings

A bare NFT-domain is just a name. To make it work as a transfer alias (username.ton → your address), you set up resolvers:

  • Go to dns.ton.org → My domains.
  • Open the domain → Settings.
  • Bind a wallet address (your current wallet).
  • Optionally — TON Site (for a website), Telegram (link to profile), TON Storage.

After that any wallet that resolves .ton (Tonkeeper, MyTonWallet, all major ones) accepts your name in the recipient field.

Renewal

A domain renews once a year via a manual transaction: send 0.015 TON to the domain’s smart contract. It’s a routine operation, usually done with one click in the dns.ton.org UI.

If you forget to renew — the domain goes back to auction. The previous owner fully loses their rights. There’s no DNS-style grace period; it’s a hard expiry.

Selling a domain

A domain is an NFT — sellable on any TON NFT marketplace.

The main venues in 2026:

  • getgems.io — the largest general TON NFT market.
  • dns.ton.org → Marketplace — built-in venue for direct sales.
  • webdom.market — domain-specialised marketplace.
  • Fragment.com — Telegram’s separate product. Not for .ton domains — for usernames and anonymous numbers.

Sales are like ordinary NFT trades: list at fixed price or open auction, the marketplace takes its cut (typically 5%), TON arrives at your address.

Fragment vs .ton — not the same

This is the most common confusion. Side-by-side:

Parameter.ton domain (dns.ton.org)Telegram username (Fragment)
What it isDomain name with TON resolverTelegram username @nickname
Auction venuedns.ton.orgfragment.com
Where it’s usedTON wallets, TON Sites, ADNLOnly inside Telegram
Min characters45
StorageNFT on TONNFT on TON (separate collection)
Renewal0.015 TON per yearFree (one-time purchase, kept forever)

Both products are NFTs on TON; both sell via auction; but they’re different collections with different goals. A .ton domain doesn’t grant a Telegram username, and vice versa.

What domains actually cost

Mid-2026 prices, drawn from getgems.io and dns.ton.org:

  • 3-character — not registerable; only exist from early reservations; rare on the market, $50k+.
  • 4-character — typical 5,000–50,000 TON ($30,000–300,000+).
  • 5-character — 500–5,000 TON.
  • 6–7 characters — 50–500 TON.
  • 8–10 characters — 5–50 TON.
  • 11+ characters — auction starts at 1 TON, most are free.

That’s the secondary market. The primary auction is cheaper if you’re quick and willing to monitor.

How to use a domain

Beyond “receive transfers under a pretty name”, several practical scenarios:

TON Sites — your own site without hosting

Bind the domain to a TON node ADNL address running a website. Open the site through TON Proxy — built into Tonkeeper and MyTonWallet, or via gateways like myname.ton.site in a regular browser.

It’s a niche: no SEO, low traffic, but ideologically real Web3.

Brand for a project

If you run a project on TON, a .ton domain simplifies onboarding: “go to ourapp.ton” beats a long HTTPS URL.

Speculation

A real segment. Buy a short name at auction; sell it higher in a year or two. Risks — broad crypto drawdown plus trend shifts. Not financial advice: approach it like a collectible NFT purchase.

Where to start

If you want your own .ton:

  1. Install a wallet — Tonkeeper or MyTonWallet.
  2. Buy 5–10 TON for registration and renewal.
  3. Visit dns.ton.org and find a free 11+ character name.
  4. Bid 1 TON, wait 7 days.
  5. Bind your wallet to the domain.

After that — depending on interest: spin up a TON Site, sell speculatively, or just enjoy a clean resolver.

Sources

Frequently asked

The auction starting price depends on length. From 11 characters and longer — starts at 1 TON. Short names (4–10 characters) start higher and often sell for tens or hundreds of TON. Plus 0.015 TON for annual renewal.
If you don't send 0.015 TON to the domain's smart contract within a year, the name automatically goes back to auction. The previous owner loses their rights — and any data tied to the domain.
Each domain is an NFT on the TON network. You can attach a wallet address (to receive transfers by name), a TON Sites endpoint, a Telegram link and other data. Resolvers work via NFTs without classic DNS.
Through gateways — yes. The simplest is to append `.ton.site` (e.g. durov.ton.site), or to use the Tonkeeper / MyTonWallet built-in browser. Native `.ton` resolution doesn't work in most regular browsers.
Fragment is Telegram's official auction for rare usernames (`@username`) and anonymous numbers (+888...). It's a separate NFT collection on TON — not the same as ordinary `.ton` domains from dns.ton.org. Two different products.

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