Tools

Solana Token Checker

Paste a coin’s address, approve a small check fee in your wallet, then see what is public—name, supply, who can still print more or freeze balances, and how it looks in apps.

Check a token
Connect your wallet, paste a coin address, and approve a small service fee. Then we load what Solana shows: name, how much still exists, and whether anyone can still print more, freeze balances, or change how it looks in apps.

Connect your wallet

Each lookup includes a service payment (loading fee…). You need a wallet connected before you run a check.

Coin address

Your balance for this coin
After a successful check, we show what this wallet holds for that coin.

Run a check above—your connected wallet is used for the fee and for this balance readout.

How it works

Follow these steps in order. Each card is a checkpoint before you move on.

  1. 1
    Connect your wallet
    Each check uses a small payment from your wallet. Connect first so you can approve the fee when you look up a coin.
  2. 2
    Paste the address
    Copy the coin’s address from a block explorer or your records and paste it into the lookup field.
  3. 3
    Approve and load
    Confirm in your wallet. We collect the service fee, then load supply, decimal places, and who can still print more, freeze balances, or edit the public profile.
  4. 4
    Review the results
    Read the trust signals on the page. If this wallet holds that coin, we also show your balance on the side.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about this tool and what happens when you use it.

Does this tool change the coin itself?
No. Looking up a coin does not change its settings. The only network step is the small service payment to run each check.
How much does each check cost?
A small fixed amount per lookup, plus the usual network fee. Your wallet shows the exact charge before you approve.
Why might name or image be missing?
Some coins never published a public profile, or the link may be unavailable. Supply and control settings still load from the network.
What does fixed supply mean?
It means nobody can print more coins for that coin anymore. That is often a positive sign for buyers who want a capped total.

Check a coin before you buy or share it

Paste an address to see how much still exists, whether anyone can print more or freeze balances, and how the coin looks in wallets. A small per-check fee keeps the tool sustainable while you sanity-check a project before you spend money or tell others about it.

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