TRON DAO has announced that the TRON network is now supported on Reown SDK, an open-source toolkit designed to help developers build seamless onchain applications. The integration gives builders a unified way to add both TRON and EVM-compatible networks into their decentralized applications without having to create custom wallet adapters or maintain chain-specific infrastructure.
The launch is aimed at simplifying multichain development at a time when more teams want to reach users across different blockchain ecosystems while preserving a consistent product experience. With a single implementation, developers using Reown SDK can now connect wallets to TRON, authenticate users, send transactions, and support payments directly inside their applications.
A Single SDK for TRON and EVM Workflows
According to the announcement, the new support allows teams to manage TRON and EVM integrations within one development framework. That means builders can reduce the engineering overhead typically associated with adding a non-EVM network to an existing dApp stack.
Reown SDK’s TRON support includes wallet authentication, social and email login options, TRX and TRC-20 token transfers, on-platform swaps, fiat on- and off-ramp functionality, and built-in analytics dashboards. The SDK also supports seamless account connections across networks, enabling users to switch between TRON and EVM chains within the same session.
Another point highlighted in the release is compatibility with both modern and legacy transaction formats, which is intended to improve wallet interoperability. For developers, this can help preserve user experience while accommodating a broader range of wallets and transaction handling methods.
Lowering Friction for Builders
TRON positioned the partnership as part of a broader push to make its network easier to integrate into mainstream multichain applications. Justin Sun, founder of TRON, said the network was built to provide the performance and scale needed for the next generation of onchain applications, adding that Reown SDK gives developers a way to plug TRON into multichain apps through a single implementation.
In Sun’s view, easier integration can translate into faster product iteration. The company emphasized that reducing technical friction for builders may help teams launch more quickly and access one of the larger user bases in the blockchain industry.
WalletConnect CEO Jess Houlgrave echoed that message, describing TRON as one of the most active and fastest-growing blockchain ecosystems. She said developers should not have to choose between ecosystems or build bespoke infrastructure for every chain they want to support. Through the Reown integration, teams can extend the same streamlined workflow they already use for EVM networks to TRON as well.
TRON’s Scale and Ecosystem Metrics
TRON’s announcement leaned heavily on the size of its network to make the case for developer adoption. The organization said TRON currently supports more than 369 million accounts and has seen strong usage in stablecoin transfers, payments, and decentralized finance.
Additional figures cited from TRONSCAN show that as of March 2026, the blockchain had processed more than 13 billion total transactions and held over $23 billion in total value locked (TVL). The release also noted that TRON had until recently hosted the largest circulating supply of USD Tether (USDT), which it said currently exceeds $85 billion.
These numbers are central to TRON’s pitch to developers: by adding support for the network through Reown SDK, applications may be able to tap into an ecosystem with significant stablecoin activity and an established payments footprint.
Testing, Compliance, and Existing Adoption
Reown said developers can begin by adding TRON to their app configuration and testing on the network’s Shasta and Nile testnets. This should allow teams to experiment with wallet flows, transaction handling, and multichain user journeys before deploying to production.
The company also stressed that the platform includes compliance-oriented tools, including Travel Rule support for financial applications. For teams building payment products or regulated finance-related experiences, that feature may be an important consideration alongside the core onboarding and transaction stack.
Since launching in 2022, Reown SDK has been adopted across a range of onchain applications, with the announcement naming projects and platforms such as Morpho, Ethena, Marinade Finance, and Coinbase. TRON’s addition broadens the SDK’s reach beyond EVM-centered development and strengthens its appeal for teams seeking a broader multichain product strategy.
Why the Integration Matters
The significance of the launch lies less in introducing an entirely new product category and more in reducing technical barriers between ecosystems that have often required separate tooling. For many developers, multichain expansion can become expensive and operationally complex when wallet connectivity, authentication, payments, and analytics must be rebuilt for each network.
By packaging these functions into a single SDK workflow, Reown and TRON are effectively targeting one of the main bottlenecks in dApp scaling: fragmented infrastructure. If the integration works as intended, developers may be able to ship faster while users benefit from more consistent interfaces across chains.
For TRON, the integration also reinforces the network’s positioning as a foundational layer for high-volume blockchain use cases, especially in stablecoin settlement and payments. The announcement frames the network as infrastructure capable of supporting applications designed for global reach, potentially serving very large user bases over time.
While the release is promotional in tone, the practical takeaway is straightforward: developers who already use Reown SDK now have a simpler route to add TRON support, and teams building on TRON gain a more direct path into multichain application design. In a market where usability and interoperability are often as important as raw throughput, that may prove to be a meaningful development.

