SPAM • DUST • SCAM - What happens if you burn them?
If you’ve ever opened your Solana wallet and felt like something is off, you’re definitely not alone.
Over time, many wallets collect spam tokens and dust assets that were never bought, traded, or intentionally received.
You can already see them on the screen.
They look harmless.
They look worthless.
But they lock up your SOL balance.
They’re worthless.
But they still lock up SOL rent.
Most of these tokens have zero value.
No liquidity, no market activity, no real use case.
What’s less obvious is that each token still exists inside a Solana token account.
And on Solana, every token account requires rent in SOL.
That means even a completely useless token can quietly lock a portion of SOL inside your wallet.
One account doesn’t matter much, but dozens of unused accounts slowly add up.
This is not a bug.
And it’s not a hidden fee.
It’s simply how the Solana account model works.
Burn them.
Rent gets released.
When spam or dust tokens are burned and their empty token accounts are closed,
the locked SOL rent is released back to your wallet.
Nothing special happens behind the scenes.
Your wallet just becomes cleaner, and unused SOL returns where it belongs.
You’re not earning rewards.
You’re not generating profit.
It’s simply wallet cleanup and SOL rent recovery.
Want to check?
If you’re curious how much SOL rent might be locked in unused token accounts,
you can check it using a utility like Solchekers.
It’s a technical tool, not a token project.
No native token, no yield promises.
Just a way to scan your Solana wallet and see what’s actually sitting there.
Sometimes crypto isn’t about finding something new.
Sometimes it’s just about removing what shouldn’t be there anymore.
You can check it here:
https://solchekers.com/
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