Trojan has been one of the most popular Telegram trading bots on Solana since mid-2024. It carved out a reputation for speed, a clean interface (for a Telegram bot), and reliable execution — all things that matter when you're trying to buy a token before it pumps 10x in three minutes.
But the Solana trading bot landscape has evolved fast. BullX, Axiom, and Photon have all shipped major updates. So does Trojan still hold up in 2026?
This review covers everything: features, speed, fees, security, and an honest comparison with the competition.
What Is Trojan Bot?
Trojan is a Telegram-based trading bot for Solana. You interact with it entirely through Telegram — paste a token address, hit a button, and the bot executes the trade on-chain using a wallet it generates for you.
No website to visit. No MetaMask popup. No wallet connection flow. Everything happens in a chat window, which is exactly why Telegram bots became so popular — they remove friction.
Trojan supports:
- Instant buys and sells via token address
- Limit orders (buy/sell at specific prices)
- DCA (Dollar Cost Averaging) — automatic recurring buys
- Copy trading — mirror another wallet's trades
- Sniping — auto-buy tokens the moment they launch on Pump.fun
- Multi-wallet management — run multiple wallets from one Telegram account
- PnL tracking — see your profit/loss per token and overall
Setting Up Trojan
Getting started takes about 60 seconds:
- Open Telegram and search for the official Trojan bot (verify the username carefully — scam bots exist)
- Hit
/start
- The bot generates a Solana wallet for you automatically
- Send SOL to the wallet address it provides
- You're ready to trade
Important security step: Immediately export and back up your private key. Trojan gives you a command to view it. Write it down or store it in a password manager. If you lose access to your Telegram account or the bot goes down, you'll need that key to recover your funds.
Core Features
Buy and Sell
The bread and butter. Paste a token's contract address (CA) into the chat, and Trojan shows you:
- Token name, symbol, and current price
- Market cap and 24h volume
- Liquidity and holder count
- Quick-buy buttons (0.1 SOL, 0.5 SOL, 1 SOL, custom)
Tap a button, and the trade executes within seconds. Selling works the same way — open your positions, tap sell percentages (25%, 50%, 100%), done.
The UI here is what Trojan does best. It's clean for a Telegram bot, buttons are laid out logically, and you don't need to type commands for basic operations.
Limit Orders
You can set buy orders below current price or sell orders above it. Trojan monitors the price and executes when your target is hit.
This is genuinely useful for tokens you're watching but don't want to ape into at current levels. Set a limit buy, walk away, and let the bot handle it.
Caveat: Limit orders rely on Trojan's servers monitoring prices. If there's a server hiccup or the price moves too fast (common with memecoins), your order might not fill at exactly your target.
Copy Trading
Paste a wallet address you want to follow, set your buy amount, and Trojan will mirror that wallet's trades automatically.
This is one of Trojan's strongest features. The implementation is solid:
- Set max buy amounts per trade
- Blacklist specific tokens
- Set automatic take-profit and stop-loss
- Choose which wallets to copy (you can follow multiple)
The main limitation is speed. Copy trading always has inherent latency — the wallet you're following buys, the transaction confirms, Trojan detects it, then submits your trade. On volatile memecoins, even a few seconds can mean a very different entry price.
Sniping
Trojan can auto-buy tokens as they launch on Pump.fun. You set criteria (like minimum liquidity or specific deployer wallets), and the bot attempts to buy the moment a matching token appears.
Sniping is competitive though. You're racing against hundreds of other bots and snipers, many running custom infrastructure. Trojan's snipe execution is decent, but dedicated sniping tools may get you in earlier on the most competitive launches.
DCA (Dollar Cost Averaging)
Set up automatic recurring buys at fixed intervals. Useful for tokens you believe in long-term but don't want to time your entry on. Choose your interval (hourly, daily, etc.), amount per buy, and total investment.
Speed and Execution
Speed is critical for Solana trading bots, and Trojan performs well here. In our testing:
- Standard buys: 1-3 seconds from button tap to on-chain confirmation
- Sniping: Typically within the first 5-10 transactions after a token launches
- Copy trades: 2-5 second delay after the copied wallet's transaction confirms
These numbers are competitive. Trojan uses Jito bundles and priority fees to land transactions quickly, which helps during congestion.
However, during extreme network congestion or when a token is going parabolic with thousands of simultaneous buyers, all bots struggle. Trojan handles these situations about as well as any Telegram bot can, but don't expect sub-second execution during peak mania.