Token listing covers every surface where your Solana token needs to appear after launch — DexScreener and Birdeye (automatic once the pool trades), the Jupiter strict list (the canonical verification most other surfaces derive from), Phantom's verified badge, and the manual aggregator listings on CoinGecko and CoinMarketCap. Each has different criteria and a different timeline, and they share a common set of preconditions: revoked authorities, IPFS-pinned metadata, and an active pool with real liquidity. The articles below walk through the listing surfaces in the order traders check them, what each one requires, and how to sequence your submissions so the verification stack fills in cleanly.
Guides in this topic
Get Your Solana Token Listed on Phantom Wallet (2026)
How to get a Solana token displayed on Phantom: exact requirements, how Phantom indexes tokens, what triggers the spam filter, how to apply for verified.
solanaphantomtoken-listingexplainerJupiter Strict List: Solana Token Verification (2026)
Jupiter's strict list is the de facto verification standard for Solana tokens. What it is, how to get listed, and what happens if you're not.
solanajupiterverificationtoken-listing
How these Token Listing guides connect
Every guide tagged token-listing 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 token listing 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.