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T TON Adoption
DeFi COMPARISON · 2026

Tonstakers vs Whales Pool vs bemo: 2026 comparison

Three ways to stake TON in 2026: liquid via Tonstakers, classic nominator Whales Pool, and compliance-leaning bemo. APR, lock-up, slashing, withdrawal speed.

Author
TON Adoption Team · research desk
Published
5 min read

TL;DR. Tonstakers leads on TVL and DeFi integrations — the choice for active DeFi users. Whales Pool is the oldest and simplest classic nominator, no LST token and no extra smart-contract risk on top of the base layer. bemo is the middle ground with compliance focus and audit-grade reporting, useful for diversifying stake across protocols. Net APY for all three sits in the 3.5–4.2% range as of May 2026 — the choice comes down to UX, risk profile, and tax exposure rather than yield.

Evaluation criteria

The parameters that actually differentiate the pools:

  • Net APR/APY — what reaches you after protocol fee and validator cut.
  • Lock period — how long TON is locked; can you exit earlier.
  • Liquid staking token (LST) — is there a receipt token and where is it accepted.
  • Withdrawal speed — instant / buffered / via epoch.
  • TVLpool size; affects concentration risk and slippage.
  • Audit history — who audited, when, public reports available.
  • Slashing exposure — how shielded is the stake from validator penalties.
  • Minimum stake — entry threshold.
  • Tax footprint — how easy or messy reporting is.

Baseline table

ParameterTonstakersWhales Poolbemo
TypeLiquid stakingNominator poolLiquid staking
TVL (May 2026)~$209M~$40M (2 pools combined)~$4M
LST tokentsTONnonestTON
Minimum1 TON50 TON (No.1), 1 TON (No.2)1 TON
Net APY~4–5%~3.5–4.2%~4–5%
Protocol fee~10% of rewards~10% of rewards~10% of rewards
Fast exitDEX instant (–0.1–0.5%)None, only epoch queueInstant via buffer
Pool exit24–36 h18–36 h24–36 h
AuditCertiK + SpearbitTON Whales team, no public smart-contract auditCertiK
Open sourcePartialPartialPartial
DeFi integrationsMaximumMinimal (no LST)Medium

Tonstakers: TVL leader and integration king

Tonstakers is the largest liquid staking pool on TON — ~$209M TVL on DeFiLlama (May 2026). The team historically overlaps with TON Whales — Tonstakers is the evolution from classic nominator to liquid staking.

What makes Tonstakers strong:

  • Deep ecosystem integration. tsTON is accepted on STON.fi (direct tsTON-TON pair), DeDust (stable pool at 0.04% fee), EVAA Protocol (as collateral for lending), DAOlama (some strategies).
  • Exit via DEX is instant, typical discount 0.1–0.5%.
  • CertiK + Spearbit audits, public reports.
  • API is standardised. Tonkeeper and MyTonWallet can stake into Tonstakers directly from the wallet UI.

Downsides:

  • TVL concentration in one protocol — biggest single-point-of-failure among TON LSTs.
  • tsTON has rebase logic, which creates accounting headaches in tax jurisdictions where every rebase is a taxable event.
  • Critics point out Tonstakers controls a significant share of TON staking, reducing network decentralisation.

Whales Pool: classic nominator, no LST

Whales Pool is two classical nominator pools run by the TON Whales team, no LST token. Funds delegate directly to validators, rewards accrue as TON balance growth on your wallet.

Why Whales Pool is a defensible choice:

  • No additional smart-contract risk on top of base staking. Stake → validator → reward. Full stop.
  • Longest operating history among TON nominator pools (since 2021).
  • Rewards recognised at payout — much simpler accounting.
  • Transparent validator set, known operator team.

Downsides:

  • No LST → stake is unusable in DeFi (no collateral lending, no DEX trading).
  • Exit only through the epoch queue, 18–36 hours. In a crisis you cannot sell stake fast.
  • 50 TON minimum on pool No.1 (historically), pool No.2 takes 1 TON.
  • No independent smart-contract audit published; security review is more of an internal exercise.

bemo: compliance-leaning middle ground

bemo is the second largest LST on TON by TVL, but small in absolute terms (~$4M). Positioning: “institutional” pool with a security/compliance lean. stTON is the receipt token.

Strengths:

  • CertiK audit with public report.
  • Instant-buffer for queue-less exit (while the buffer holds).
  • UI is dry and banking-grade — no gamification or marketing pop-ups.
  • Supported on STON.fi, DeDust, EVAA, the main wallets.

Weaknesses:

  • TVL is 50× smaller than Tonstakers → less pool depth, fewer validators.
  • DeFi integrations slimmer than tsTON.
  • Same rebase tax complications as Tonstakers.

Slashing and validators

Slashing on TON is a penalty for validator misbehavior (missed blocks, double-signing proof). In practice slashing is rare — 1–3% of validator stake when it does happen, and only for proven faults.

ProtocolSlashing approach
TonstakersTeam selects validators; insurance fund covers part of slashing losses
Whales PoolOperator team runs validators directly; longest historical uptime
bemoSimilar to Tonstakers but fewer validators due to smaller TVL

If you have $1000 in bemo and slashing eats 2% of one of 5 validators with equal allocation, you lose $4 (0.4%). Not catastrophic, but not zero.

Decision tree

Long HODL, hands off, simple taxes → Whales Pool. Rewards land as TON, accounting is clean, no smart-contract layer above base staking.

Active DeFi user (LP, lending, leverage) → Tonstakers. tsTON is accepted everywhere; you can compose strategies.

Want to diversify across two-three pools to avoid single-team dependency → 50% Tonstakers + 30% bemo + 20% Hipo (or + Whales Pool). Costs ~0.1–0.3% effective APY, hedges against a single-protocol smart-contract bug.

Sub-50 TON and want to start → bemo or Tonstakers (Whales Pool No.1 won’t accept the deposit).

Smart-contract risk: explicit

Practical recommendations

  • Before your first stake, run a test cycle: 5–10 TON, full stake → unstake. Confirm rewards accrue and exit works.
  • Keep a 0.5–1 TON gas buffer in the wallet. Without it transactions fail.
  • LST tokens (tsTON, stTON) need the same custody care as any jetton — compromise of your seed loses them. Cold storage via Ledger is possible — see the Ledger guide.
  • Do not trust marketing APYs on landing pages. Check effective APY on DeFiLlama: Tonstakers, bemo.
  • When exiting tsTON through DEX, compare prices on STON.fi and DeDust — sometimes the spread is 0.3–0.7%.
  • For stakes above $10K, consider a multisig wallet — see the multisig guide.

Pre-stake checklist

  • Decided on LST vs classic model.
  • Wallet is on the W5 contract version (older versions may not handle tsTON cleanly).
  • Seed phrase stored safely, not on the device.
  • Tax reporting plan in place for your jurisdiction.
  • Stake split across 2–3 protocols if size is meaningful.
  • Address bookmarked in tonviewer.com to track accruals on-chain.

Sources

  • DeFiLlama: Tonstakers, bemo, Hipo
  • tonscan.org — validator data and slashing events
  • Tonstakers, Whales Pool, bemo — official sites (open via cloak).

Frequently asked

As of May 2026, all three deliver roughly 3.5–4.2% net after fees. The base TON validator rate is the same for everyone — any real difference comes from bonus campaigns (STON.fi LP rewards on tsTON), which is no longer plain staking.
Tonstakers via tsTON — instant through a DEX (0.1–0.5% discount to fair rate). bemo — instant while the buffer holds, otherwise 24–36 hours. Whales Pool — standard 18–36 hours through the validator epoch.
In most jurisdictions, yes. Staking rewards are income at the time of receipt, valued at fair market value. Liquid staking complicates accounting — every rebase is technically a taxable event, though many jurisdictions accept disposal-based accounting. Check local rules with a tax professional.
Slashing is a penalty for validator misbehavior (missed blocks, double signing). On TON it is rare and typically costs 1–3% of a validator's stake. All three pools diversify across multiple validators to minimise single-validator slash exposure. Whales Pool has the longest uptime track record among TON nominator operators.
Technically yes — OKX, Bybit, Bitget offer TON staking. Yields are similar but custodial: not your keys, KYC required, and exchange failure freezes your funds. For long-term TON holdings, non-custodial pools are safer.

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