BREAKING: Grass (GRASS), a decentralized web scraping network token, has surged 21.6% in the past 24 hours, reaching $0.356336 as of April 10, 2026, at 9:51 AM UTC.
The dramatic price movement pushed GRASS from an intraday low of $0.290604 to a 24-hour high of $0.360353, representing a trading range of nearly 24%. The token is currently trading just below its daily peak, suggesting sustained buying pressure.
Grass’s market capitalization jumped $35.7 million to $201.2 million, maintaining its position at rank #170 among all cryptocurrencies. The rally generated significant trading activity, with 24-hour volume reaching $15.3 million—indicating strong market participation.
The token’s fully diluted valuation now stands at $356.3 million, with 564.7 million GRASS tokens in circulation out of a maximum supply of 1 billion tokens. This represents approximately 56.5% of the total supply currently in the market.
Over the past seven days, GRASS has gained 23.8%, signaling a strong short-term uptrend. However, the 30-day performance shows a slight decline of 1.13%, suggesting recent volatility before this latest breakout.
The hourly data reveals continued momentum, with GRASS climbing an additional 2.49% in the last 60 minutes, indicating buying pressure remains active at current levels.
Despite the impressive rally, GRASS remains 90.9% below its all-time high of $3.89 reached on November 8, 2024. Conversely, the token has more than doubled from its all-time low of $0.166785 recorded on February 6, 2026, gaining 112.8% from that bottom.
The 21.6% surge on strong volume suggests renewed interest in the Grass protocol. Traders should monitor whether the token can maintain support above the $0.35 level, which now serves as a critical threshold. The $15.3 million in 24-hour volume—substantial for a token of this market cap—indicates genuine market interest rather than low-liquidity price manipulation.
Resistance at the 24-hour high of $0.360353 will be the next test for bulls, while support at the previous range low of $0.29 remains relevant for risk management purposes.


