Solana Multisender
How to send SOL or SPL tokens to multiple addresses with a Solana multisender
If you need to send SOL or SPL tokens to multiple addresses, SolCreate gives you a dedicated no-code Solana multisender flow. You can choose SOL or SPL mode, load a recipient list from text or CSV, review totals, confirm the fixed 0.03 SOL service fee for the whole transaction and send a bulk transfer from one guided wallet flow.
SOL and SPL bulk sends
Use one tool to bulk-send native SOL or SPL tokens to multiple recipients without building your own scripts.
CSV and text input
Paste recipient lines directly or upload a CSV or TXT file with address and amount pairs separated by commas.
Wallet-first preview
Review recipient counts, totals, token decimals and account setup steps before confirming the multisend transaction.
Fixed transaction fee
The SolCreate multisender keeps the service fee flat at 0.03 SOL for the whole transaction, not per address.
How it works
Step 1
Choose SOL or SPL mode
Pick whether you want to bulk-send native SOL or an SPL token, then load the mint when you are in SPL mode.
Step 2
Paste or upload recipients
Add one recipient per line in the format address, amount or upload a CSV/TXT file with the same structure.
Step 3
Preview and confirm
Load the preview, review totals and then confirm the guided wallet transaction from the live multisender.
Why use SolCreate
Useful for airdrops and distributions
Bulk-send flows are useful when a project needs to distribute SOL or SPL tokens to many wallets after launch without handling one transfer at a time.
No coding required
The multisender is built for creators who want a guided wallet flow instead of writing their own distribution scripts.
Cheapest no-code positioning
SolCreate positions the multisender alongside the rest of the launch stack as a cheapest no-code option for common Solana distribution workflows.
Fits the launch stack
SolCreate connects token creation, minting more supply, multisends, freeze controls, liquidity and burn workflows inside one platform.
What a Solana multisender actually does
When people search Solana multisender or bulk send SPL tokens, they usually want one place to prepare many recipient transfers without manually repeating the same wallet action for each address. That is especially common during airdrops, community rewards, treasury distributions and post-launch token operations.
This page explains that intent clearly while routing users into the live tool. The live tool focuses on recipient parsing, mint loading for SPL mode, target-account setup, the fixed 0.03 SOL fee and the final wallet confirmation flow.
Keeping the multisender separate from token creation also makes the SolCreate product map easier to understand. Creating a token, minting more supply, sending that supply to many recipients and later managing liquidity or burns are related steps, but they are not the same task.
Related searches
These related pages support adjacent search intent. They help visitors move between Solana token creation, Ethereum ERC-20 deployment, mint-authority controls, freeze-account controls, liquidity setup, LP lock and burn actions without leaving the SolCreate domain, which also strengthens internal linking for crawling.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Can I send SOL to multiple wallets here?
Yes. The multisender supports native SOL bulk sends to multiple recipient wallet addresses from one guided flow.
Can I send SPL tokens to multiple addresses?
Yes. In SPL mode the multisender loads the mint, checks decimals and prepares the token transfer instructions for the recipient list.
What file format does the multisender accept?
You can paste plain text or upload a CSV or TXT file with one line per recipient in the format address, amount.
Does the multisender require coding?
No. SolCreate is designed as a no-code flow, so the wallet-confirmation path replaces the need to write your own bulk-send script for common use cases.
Does the multisender charge per address?
No. The multisender uses one fixed 0.03 SOL SolCreate service fee for the whole transaction rather than a fee per recipient address.