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Telegram Username NFTs and +888 Anonymous Numbers: Market and Auctions

Telegram Username NFTs and +888 Anonymous Numbers: Market and Auctions

Telegram username NFTs and +888 anonymous numbers are two adjacent markets that grew around Fragment.com. Both use TON as the payment and settlement rail, and both turned digital objects (a handle, a virtual phone number) into transferable assets. Since Fragment launched in late 2022, the platform has processed sales worth hundreds of millions of dollars in TON-equivalent.

This piece breaks down how the mechanics work, what categories exist, how price is formed, which risks are not obvious, and what to know about taxes.

What a username NFT is

A Telegram username (@username) is a unique identifier that lets users find an account without knowing the phone number. Until 2022 usernames were free, first-come-first-served. Short and meaningful handles had been squatted and often sat idle.

In late 2022 Telegram launched Fragment — an auction marketplace where:

  1. Team-reserved usernames (short, dictionary words, brand names) go on open ascending auction.
  2. Each username is wrapped into a TON NFT: a contract tracks current ownership.
  3. Telegram reads the on-chain owner → routes the login to the account that controls the NFT.

This turned usernames into transferable property: sellable, giftable, even usable as collateral.

+888 anonymous numbers: what they’re for

In parallel with usernames Fragment launched the sale of virtual numbers in the +888 range. These are not real SIM cards but service-level numbers that Telegram accepts for account binding.

Reasons to use one:

  • Anonymity. Create a Telegram account without exposing a real number. Useful for journalists under authoritarian regimes, researchers, marketplace sellers.
  • Reserve. Backup account without buying a SIM and paying a subscription.
  • Premium numbers. Short numbers (+888 0001, +888 0042) become collectibles themselves — like short domains.

Categories and pricing

Understanding the segments matters so you don’t overpay for a “mid” lot.

Usernames

  • Premium single-word: @alex, @tom, @boss — tens to hundreds of thousands of dollars.
  • Brand names: @apple, @nike, @coke — bought by corporates for six figures when they appear at all (Fragment restricts trading of some registered marks).
  • Dictionary: @coffee, @bitcoin, @news — low thousands to tens of thousands.
  • 3–4 letters: scarce, trade from $500 to $10k.
  • 5+ letters or letter-number combos: mass market, $5–$300.

+888 numbers

  • 4-digit: +888 1234, +888 0042 — premium, $5k+ for “pretty” ones.
  • 5-digit: mid segment, $500–$3k.
  • 6–7-digit: mass market, $20–$200.
  • Randomly generated “ordinary” numbers: fixed price (around $9 at launch, adjustable).
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Prices are quoted in TON, not dollars. Every bid and every fixed price on Fragment is denominated in TON. When TON appreciates, the dollar equivalent of a “premium handle” goes up automatically, and vice versa. Factor that into budgeting.

How to buy: the Fragment flow

  1. Connect a wallet. Fragment speaks TON Connect: Tonkeeper, MyTonWallet, Wallet / TON Space.
  2. Top up TON. Your wallet needs TON for the bid plus the on-chain fee (~0.1 TON).
  3. Find the lot. Search by username or number; you see current bid, minimum increment, time left.
  4. Place a bid. If you outbid someone, their TON returns automatically.
  5. Win = NFT in your wallet. After the auction ends, the username/number NFT appears in your wallet’s collection. To activate it open Telegram → Settings → Username/Phone → select the new one.

Secondary market and pricing

After the primary auction, usernames can be resold. Main venues:

  • Fragment — official secondary, again via auction or fixed price.
  • Getgems — the largest NFT marketplace on TON; many username and +888 listings.
  • Portals, Tonnel, MRKT — Telegram-gift marketplaces; premium usernames are often cross-listed.

Secondary price reflects several factors:

  • Recognisability: short dictionary words, names, brand terms.
  • Global usability: English/Latin handles trade better than Cyrillic-only.
  • Letters vs digits: dictionary handles usually beat numeric ones at equal length.
  • Age: handles that existed before Fragment (legacy) often carry a premium for historical trail.

Risks that aren’t obvious

Username NFTs and +888 are an unusual asset class. A few less-obvious risks:

  1. Platform dependency. Telegram is the only “consumer” of these NFTs. A policy change (e.g. Telegram starts issuing new short usernames directly) deflates the market.
  2. No reliable floor. Unlike Toncoin or USDT, a username has no buyer-of-last-resort. A premium handle can sit unsold for months.
  3. Legal claims. Brands (Apple, Coca-Cola) can challenge their name. Fragment delists on DMCA requests.
  4. Wallet control = account control. If the wallet seed holding a username NFT is compromised, the attacker not only steals the asset but takes over your Telegram account.
  5. No insurance. As of today no insurance product covers username NFTs.
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A real attack pattern. In 2024–2025 there were several public cases where attackers obtained a seed phrase from the owner of a valuable username (phishing + social engineering) and re-registered the NFT to their address. The victim was cut off from their own Telegram. The only durable defence: a hardware wallet (Ledger) or a multisig owning the NFT.

Tax angle (general guidance — not advice)

Selling a username NFT or a +888 number typically qualifies as the disposal of a digital asset:

  • Capital gains or income tax depending on the jurisdiction.
  • Gain = sale price minus documented purchase price.
  • Reporting is usually the seller’s responsibility — no withholding agent.

Keep proof of purchase as: Fragment transaction on TONscan + a screenshot of the auction page.

When buying makes sense

If you treat it as an investment:

  • Premium lots ($10k+) — high risk / high premium, illiquid market.
  • Brand usernames — straightforward if you own the brand; messy otherwise.
  • Practical-use +888 — justified when there’s a real need to obscure a phone number.

If you treat it as a resale asset:

  • Knowing the target region’s language matters more than handle “beauty”.
  • Be ready to hold 6–18 months — normal.
  • Day-one flips are highly volatile.

Further reading

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