TON → NEAR
| # | Exchange | Score | No-KYC record? | Rate | You receive (1 TON) | Limits (TON) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
|
C priv 48trust 78 | — | 1 TON = 0.81581654 NEAR | 0.81581654 NEAR | min 1.77534493 · max 6058.79758324 | swap on SideShift → | |
| 2 |
|
C priv 49trust 79 | 1 TON = 0.769441 NEAR | 0.769441 NEAR | min 0.1406503 | swap on notkyc | swap on StealthEX → |
Swapping Toncoin to NEAR Protocol means moving from Telegram's TON ecosystem into NEAR's sharded, account-model L1. Both chains settle in seconds with sub-cent fees, so a no-KYC swap here is fast end-to-end - usually under two minutes including confirmations. Common motivations: redeploying TON gains into NEAR DeFi (Ref Finance, Burrow), grabbing NEAR for AI-agent projects on the chain, or accessing Aurora's EVM layer without touching a centralized ramp.
TON -> NEAR: what makes this pair specific
TON and NEAR are both non-EVM L1s with custom address formats. TON uses workchain-based addresses (often starting with 'EQ' or 'UQ') and a bounceable/non-bounceable distinction that trips up newcomers. NEAR uses human-readable account IDs (yourname.near) alongside 64-character implicit addresses. Neither chain shares signatures or address formats with the other, so this is always a cross-chain swap - no bridging shortcuts, no wrapped-asset tricks.
Liquidity for TON-NEAR is thinner than TON-USDT or NEAR-USDT, so most aggregated routes internally hop through a stablecoin or BTC leg. That is why quoted rates can vary 1-3 percent across providers for the same input amount. Block times work in your favor: TON finalizes in ~5 seconds, NEAR in ~1-2 seconds, so total swap time is bottlenecked by the provider's internal processing, not the chains.
Choosing a route and sizing the swap
- Confirm the deposit address type - send a bounceable TON address only if the provider explicitly supports it; otherwise use non-bounceable (UQ...) to avoid stuck funds.
- For NEAR receipt, double-check whether the provider accepts named accounts or only implicit addresses.
- Check min/max: TON's low unit value means minimums are often 5-10 TON; large orders (>5000 TON) may exhaust a single provider's float.
- Prefer fixed-rate quotes for amounts over a few hundred USD - floating rates can drift during NEAR's quick finality window if the provider is slow to credit.
- Verify the refund-address field is filled with a TON wallet you control, not the exchange-internal address.
Practical tip: split orders above ~$2000 into two transactions across different providers. This avoids float exhaustion penalties and gives you a real-time A/B on execution quality. Memo/tag fields are not used on either chain for these swaps, but always send a small test amount first if you have not used a particular route before.