Banana Gun launched in 2023 as a Telegram sniping bot for Ethereum. Two years and several market cycles later, it has grown into a multichain trading platform with $16 billion in cumulative volume, 1.2 million registered users, and a web terminal that rivals standalone trading apps.
The question is no longer whether Banana Gun works. The question is whether it still holds up against the wave of competitors that have entered the space since. We tested the platform across all its products and chains to find out.
| $16B+ Lifetime Volume |
24M+ Trades Executed |
1.2M+ Registered Users |
88% First-Block Snipe |
5 Chains |
Banana Gun is a DeFi trading platform that operates through three interfaces: a Telegram bot, a web-based trading terminal called Banana Pro, and an upcoming simple swap page called Banana Swap.
All three share the same execution engine. The same trade routed through Telegram and through Banana Pro hits the blockchain with identical speed and identical MEV protection. This matters because most competing platforms treat their web app and their bot as separate products with separate backends. Banana Gun treats them as two windows into the same system.
Supported chains: Ethereum, Solana, BNB Chain, Base, and MegaETH.
Every trading bot claims speed. Banana Gun backs it up with a specific number: an 88% first-block sniping success rate on Ethereum. That means when a new token launches, Banana Gun lands the snipe in the very first block 88 out of 100 times, competing against every other bot and MEV searcher trying to do the same thing.
We tested this over several token launches during our review period. The results were consistent with the claimed metric. Snipes landed fast, consistently in the first or second block. On Solana, execution felt near-instant, though the chain’s architecture makes direct block-level comparisons with Ethereum less meaningful.
The custom routing engine is the differentiator here. It is not relying on public RPC endpoints or generic DEX aggregators. The team built proprietary routing that optimizes path and timing for each chain independently.
The bot recently merged all its functionality into a single unified interface. Previously, Banana Gun had separate bots for buying on EVM, selling on EVM, and trading on Solana. Now it is one bot, one session, all five chains.
Setup takes about two minutes. Generate a wallet or import an existing one, set your default buy and sell amounts, and you are ready. The interface is text-based Telegram, so do not expect charts or visual dashboards here. What you get instead is speed. Paste a contract address, confirm the trade, and it executes.
Features available through the Telegram bot:
The Telegram Scraper is a feature that often goes unmentioned. It monitors Telegram channels and groups for token contract addresses and mentions, feeding potential trades directly into your bot interface. Alpha discovery and execution happen in the same environment.
Banana Pro is where Banana Gun stops being “just a bot” and starts competing with standalone trading terminals.
The layout is widget-based. You drag and arrange components (charts, order panels, portfolio views, watchlists, wallet trackers) to match how you actually trade. If you run two monitors and want a chart on one screen and an order panel on another, you can configure that.
Every position opened through the Telegram bot appears in Banana Pro in real time. You can open a snipe on your phone during commute and manage the position from your desktop when you get home. The sync is bidirectional and effectively instant during our testing.
For traders who have outgrown the Telegram interface but do not want to move to a completely different platform and lose the execution speed, Banana Pro is a strong option. It carries over every feature from the bot while adding the visual depth that Telegram simply cannot provide.
Banana Gun runs automated smart contract scanning on every trade. The system checks for honeypot patterns, function changes, rug-pull indicators, and other red flags in real time. If the contract does something unexpected between when you submit the order and when it executes, the platform catches it.
MEV protection is on by default. You do not enable it, pay for it, or configure it. Every transaction on every chain routes through the protection layer automatically.
This is where Banana Gun separates itself from most trading bots. The $BANANA token is not decorative. It generates real, measurable yield.
40% of all bot trading fees, after referral deductions, get distributed to $BANANA holders every four hours. You need a minimum of 50 tokens to qualify. Claims become gasless once the accrued amount hits 0.1 ETH or 0.1 SOL.
When you claim rewards in $BANANA instead of native tokens, the platform buys those tokens from the open market. No new tokens are minted for this. Zero inflation from the rewards mechanism.
| Metric | Value |
| Total supply | 10,000,000 $BANANA |
| Circulating supply | ~3,200,000 (32.2%) |
| Permanently burned | 1,100,000 (11%) |
| Team tokens (locked) | 1,000,000 (5% cliffed 8yr, 5% cliffed 2yr) |
| Treasury (locked, vested) | 4,500,000 (250K/month emissions) |
| Buy/sell tax | 0% |
| Revenue distribution | 40% of fees, every 4 hours |
The Banana Credits system adds another deflationary layer. Users can burn $BANANA for in-bot credits that unlock premium features like additional wallet slots. Burned tokens are gone permanently.
During peak market activity in late 2025, the platform generated over $92,000 in weekly fees. Even during the quieter March 2026 consolidation phase, fees stayed above $17,000 per week. 40% of those numbers flowed directly to holders.
Banana Gun does not restrict you to a single DEX per chain. The routing engine pulls liquidity from multiple sources:
Recent additions include Zora compatibility and USD1 as a base trading currency for multi-hop routes.
| Feature | Banana Gun | Maestro | BONKbot | Unibot |
| Chains | 5 (ETH, SOL, BNB, Base, MegaETH) | 3+ | Solana only | ETH focused |
| Web terminal | Yes (Banana Pro) | No | No | Limited |
| Revenue sharing | 40% of fees to holders | Yes (lower %) | No | 40% (reduced activity) |
| Copy trading | All 5 chains | Limited | No | ETH only |
| DCA | Built-in | Built-in | No | No |
| MEV protection | Default, all chains | Partial | Solana native | Yes |
| Unified interface | One bot, all chains | Separate/chain | Single chain | Single chain |
| Lifetime volume | $16B+ | Not disclosed | Not disclosed | Declining |
The gap is widest in two areas: multichain coverage and the Telegram-to-web sync. No other platform lets you open a position in a Telegram chat and manage it from a full desktop terminal with charts, portfolio views, and multi-wallet tracking. That integration alone justifies evaluating Banana Gun as something more than a bot.
No platform is flawless. A few things stood out during testing:
Learning curve for Banana Pro. The widget-based layout is powerful but takes time to set up properly. First-time users accustomed to simpler bot interfaces might feel overwhelmed initially. A few default layout presets would help.
Telegram interface density. With all five chains now in a single bot, the menu structure has grown. Finding specific settings requires a few taps. The team has improved this with the unified bot update, but there is room for further simplification.
Weekly fee volatility. Revenue sharing is excellent when markets are active. During quiet weeks, the distributed amounts can feel thin. This is inherent to any fee-based model, not a Banana Gun-specific issue, but holders should set expectations accordingly.
Banana Swap not yet live. The simple swap product has been listed as “Coming Soon” for several months. It would complete the product trio and serve the large audience of users who want basic token swaps without full bot setup.
VERDICT: 9.2 / 10
Banana Gun in 2026 is not the same product that launched in 2023. It has evolved from a Telegram sniping bot into a full-stack DeFi trading platform with genuine competitive advantages in speed, multichain coverage, and token holder economics.
The $16 billion in volume and 1.2 million users are not legacy numbers from a hype cycle. The platform continues to generate fees weekly, distribute revenue to holders, ship product updates, and expand chain support.
If you trade on-chain across multiple networks and want a single platform that handles everything from sniping to portfolio management, Banana Gun is the most complete option available right now. The 88% snipe rate alone makes it worth testing. The revenue-sharing tokenomics make it worth holding.
Best for: Active DeFi traders who operate across multiple chains and want speed, execution quality, and passive income from the same platform.
The fastest path is the Telegram bot. Open @BananaGun_bot in Telegram, generate or import a wallet, set your default trade sizes, and you can execute your first trade within two minutes.
For the full desktop experience, open Banana Pro at pro.bananagun.io. Connect or import the same wallet you use in Telegram, and your positions will sync automatically.
To earn revenue share, acquire a minimum of 50 $BANANA tokens and hold them in an eligible wallet. Rewards accrue automatically and can be claimed from the rewards dashboard at dashboard.bananagun.io.
Disclosure: This review is based on hands-on testing of the Banana Gun platform across all supported chains and products. All statistics cited are sourced from bananagun.io, docs.bananagun.io, blog.bananagun.io, and publicly available Dune Analytics dashboards. Readers should conduct their own research before trading or investing in any cryptocurrency or DeFi platform.
Official Links: bananagun.io | pro.bananagun.io | t.me/BananaGun_bot | x.com/BananaGunBot | docs.bananagun.io | blog.bananagun.io
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