Arkham Intelligence announced it is removing support for the TON blockchain from its on-chain analytics platform. The decision, posted on X on May 12, 2026, cites a periodic review of chain integrations with user demand and ecosystem importance as the key criteria.
The timing is hard to ignore. TON just had one of its biggest weeks in years.
Arkham cited user demand and the blockchain’s importance to the crypto ecosystem as the evaluation factors behind the decision, framing it as part of a regular review of which chains warrant continued maintenance and support.
No specific data was provided on TON’s usage within the Arkham platform. The announcement did not include a timeline for data removal or whether historical TON wallet data would remain accessible. Arkham continues to operate analytics across other major blockchain networks.
TON is not a struggling chain right now. The network is coming off its best week in months.
Pavel Durov announced on May 5 that Telegram would officially take over from the TON Foundation as the network’s largest validator, a move that sent TON surging over 20% in 24 hours. Telegram Wallet’s perpetual futures volume crossed $1 billion in a single month. TON handled nearly 67 million transactions in April 2026 alone.
The Catchain 2.0 upgrade, completed in April, brought finality time down to 0.6 seconds, the fastest of any major Layer 1. Transaction fees were cut 6x. Telegram, with over 900 million users, is now the primary institutional force behind the network.
That is not the profile of a chain you drop because of low user interest. It is the profile of a chain that just became significantly harder to ignore.
Arkham’s business is on-chain intelligence. That means labeling wallets, tracking fund flows, and identifying entities behind addresses. TON’s architecture is meaningfully different from EVM chains, and its wallet structure does not map cleanly onto the address labeling systems Arkham has built for Ethereum, Solana, and Bitcoin.
Maintaining accurate intelligence on a non-EVM chain with a rapidly evolving consensus model, subsecond block times, and a large number of Telegram-integrated wallets is a different engineering problem than indexing Ethereum addresses. If Arkham’s TON data quality was lagging behind its other chains, pulling support rather than publishing incomplete intelligence is arguably the more defensible choice for a platform whose value proposition is accuracy.
The decision follows a periodic review of chain integrations, with Arkham noting it regularly evaluates which blockchains warrant continued maintenance and support. That framing suggests this is less a statement about TON’s future and more a resource allocation call inside Arkham’s engineering team.
In practice, losing Arkham coverage is not a fatal blow for TON. The network has its own native explorer in Tonscan, and several TON-specific analytics tools have grown alongside the ecosystem. Arkham’s strength is entity labeling and whale tracking across chains, which is where its absence will be felt most.
For traders who use Arkham to track large wallet movements on TON, the move means switching to TON-native tools or losing that layer of on-chain intelligence entirely. For the broader institutional narrative around TON, an analytics provider pulling support is a minor negative signal at a moment when the network is otherwise building momentum.
Arkham dropped TON support citing low user demand. The official reason is a routine resource review. The real reason is probably a combination of architectural complexity and engineering cost that did not justify the return.
What makes the announcement interesting is not what it says about Arkham. It is what it says about the gap between TON’s on-chain momentum and its presence in the Western analytics tooling ecosystem. Telegram controls the network, transaction counts are high, and Durov is actively building the MTONGA roadmap. But the infrastructure layer that institutional traders rely on for wallet intelligence just went dark on TON.
That gap will either attract new analytics providers or stay a friction point. For now, TON lost one and got nothing back in return.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.


