How to mint NFTs?
You can buy NFTs by minting an NFT, buying on the secondary market, or getting an airdrop. Let's explain each method.
You can buy NFTs by minting an NFT, buying on the secondary market, or getting an airdrop. Let's explain each method.
Minting an NFT means creating it on a blockchain for the first time.
For popular NFT projects, minting often lets you buy the NFT at a lower price than what it’ll sell on the secondary market.
This guide walks through how you can mint an NFT for an NFT project that's not your own. We assume that you know how to set up a crypto wallet and find and evaluate NFT projects. We'll cover minting your own NFT in a future guide.
To mint an NFT for an NFT project, you need to:
First, join the project’s community. The project’s creators will typically announce the mint 24-48 hours before it happens.
Popular projects have a whitelist that grants early access to the mint. To get on the whitelist:
Ignore any direct messages (DMs) from members in the community - they’re likely scams.
Before the mint, you should:
Most mints happen on the project’s website. You typically need to:
Consider minting multiple NFTs if you have conviction about a project. This way, you can sell some NFTs for a profit while holding the rest for long-term upside and community vibes.
If the project is very popular, its website might go down during the mint. If this happens, you can mint directly from the project’s smart contract. Here’s how:
Once you execute the function, you can track the transaction on Etherscan to ensure success.
If you missed the mint, you can still buy the NFT on the secondary market. Let’s cover that next.
Up next: How to buy NFTs on secondary?