TON to Cut Transaction Fees Sixfold as Pavel Durov Pushes Toward Feeless Payments

  • Pavel Durov said TON transaction fees will be cut sixfold within one week to 0.00039 TON per transaction.
  • He also said fees will stay fixed regardless of network load and that most transactions are expected to become fully feeless soon.

TON is preparing to make transactions dramatically cheaper, with Pavel Durov signaling that the network is moving toward a model where fees are barely visible and, in many cases, may disappear altogether. In a post, the Telegram founder said TON transaction fees will be reduced sixfold within one week, bringing the cost down to 0.00039 TON per transfer, or roughly $0.0005 at current implied pricing. That alone would make TON one of the cheaper major networks to use for everyday transfers. But the more striking part of the announcement was not only the size of the cut. It was the suggestion that this is merely a step toward something even more aggressive. Durov says fees will stay fixed even under network pressure According to Durov, the new fee level will remain fixed regardless of network load. That point matters because one of the more persistent user complaints across blockchain networks is not simply that fees exist, but that they become unpredictable exactly when demand rises. If TON can hold transaction costs at a stable level even during busier periods, it would give the network a clearer pitch for consumer use cases tied to messaging, payments and in-app activity. Predictability often matters more than the headline number itself. That is especially true for a network connected so closely to Telegram’s wider ecosystem, where payments are expected to feel more like internet-native utility than like navigating a volatile crypto rail. The bigger signal is the move toward feeless transactions Durov also said that most transactions will soon become fully feeless, a line that points to a broader product ambition rather than a simple fee adjustment. That matters because it shifts the conversation from cost reduction to user experience. If fees become negligible or invisible for most activity, TON starts to look less like a traditional blockchain network competing on throughput metrics and more like infrastructure trying to disappear into the product. For now, the fee cut is the concrete step. But the direction is clear enough. TON is trying to make blockchain usage feel less like a financial event each time a user taps a button and more like ordinary digital interaction, which, in the long run, may be the harder and more important thing to get right.

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