CoinGecko is one of the two major crypto aggregators (alongside CoinMarketCap), and a listing there is a real credibility marker — it's a manual application with a higher bar than the automatic surfaces like DexScreener. CoinGecko wants an active trading pair with sustained volume, a working website, live socials, and a clear token description before it will review. The articles below cover the CoinGecko application process for a Solana token, the eligibility preconditions, what to prepare before you submit, the typical review timeline, and how a CoinGecko listing fits alongside Jupiter strict-list inclusion and DexScreener Enhanced Info in a complete verification stack.
Guides in this topic
DexScreener vs CoinGecko: Which to List On First (2026)
DexScreener vs CoinGecko compared: auto-index vs manual review, cost, timeline, audience, and the right order to list your Solana token on both.
dexscreenercoingeckolistingsolanaaggregatorHow to List a Solana Token on CoinGecko (2026 Guide)
Step-by-step guide to listing a Solana SPL token on CoinGecko: requirements, application process, what gets rejected, timeline. Plus CoinMarketCap.
solanacoingeckocoinmarketcaplisting
How these Coingecko guides connect
Every guide tagged coingecko is written from the operator's seat — by people who have launched real Solana tokens and watched what actually happens after the transaction confirms. Rather than abstract documentation, each piece covers the on-chain mechanics, the irreversible decisions, and the verification steps you check on Solscan, DexScreener, and Phantom before and after you sign. Read them together and you get the full picture for this part of the launch, not an isolated how-to.
New to launching on Solana? Start with How to Create a Solana SPL Token for the end-to-end walkthrough, work through the Solana memecoin launch checklist, then come back to the coingecko guides above for the detail on this specific step. When you're ready to ship, the Solana token creator handles the mint, metadata, and authority revocation in one no-code flow — no Rust, no CLI.