Gitcoin Knowledge Base
EN
EN
  • Welcome to Gitcoin
  • Gitcoin DAO
    • Initiatives
      • DAO Support
    • Workstream Resources
      • Full Accounting
      • Full Snapshot History
    • FDD FAQ
      • What is a Sybil attack?
    • DAO FAQ
      • What is GitcoinDAO?
      • What is Quadratic Lands?
      • What are governance workstreams?
      • How do I get involved in governance?
      • What is the Gitcoin Stewards Delegation Program?
      • Who chooses Stewards?
      • Tell me more about Stewardship.
      • Where does governance happen?
      • What does a future Gitcoin DAO look like?
      • Will you eventually dissolve Gitcoin as a company?
  • Gitcoin Token
    • GTC FAQ
      • Why is Gitcoin launching a token?
      • What is the address of GTC?
      • What is the GTC Issuance?
      • How do I claim my token ?
      • I try to claim my tokens on mobile and it didn't work!
      • I missed the GTC token claim, what happens next?
      • Quadratic Lands Token Distribution web3 support-Delegate Voting Power
      • Quadratic Lands Token Distribution web3 support- Token Claim
      • Quadratic Lands Token Distribution web3 support- Signed Message Vote
      • What happens to my delegations if I transfer the tokens to someone else?
      • What types of things can the community govern with GTC?
      • Why don’t I have tokens?
      • What is Quadratic Lands?
      • I missed the GTC token claim, what happens next?
      • How can I check the status of my grant?
      • What are governance workstreams?
      • Who chooses Stewards?
  • Gitcoin Grants
    • What are Gitcoin Grants ?
    • Grants FAQ
      • What is the scope of Gitcoin Grants?
      • Are there any grant rules I need to follow?
      • I'm a programmer who wants to build on Gitcoin Grants, where do I start?
      • I see a grant that I don't like, what do I do?
      • I've posted a grant, how do I maximize my contributions?
      • Tell me about the technology you're using for Gitcoin grants
      • What do I do if my contributions are missing
      • What is the Gitcoin Grants Roadmap?
      • What's Quadratic Funding?
      • Why isn't the match amount updating?
      • Why should I contribute?
      • How can I withdraw my funds from zksync?
      • How much volume has Gitcoin Grants done?
      • I see a bug or I've got a question, what do I do?
      • I see a grant that is not a public good on the platform, what do I do?
      • I want to explore Gitcoin's other products, where do I go?
      • What is Gitcoin's mission?
      • Why isn't my grant active?
      • Why is Quadratic funding powerful?
      • Where can I learn more?
      • Learn more about matching rounds
      • How does one decide between the Grant contribution checkout options?
      • How do I withdraw my funds from an L2 (zkSync and/or Polygon/Matic?)
      • How do you prevent Sybil attacks?
  • Gitcoin Bounties
    • Bounties FAQ
      • How do I get started with Bounties
      • How do I submit work?
  • Gitcoin Quests
    • Quests FAQ
      • How do I mint a kudo?
      • How do I use kudos ?
      • Why can't I access my account?
  • External links
    • Moonshot Collective
  • Gitcoin Policy
    • Code of Conduct
    • Policy
      • Introduction
        • The Gitcoin Mission
        • What are we protecting ?
        • Why Quadratic Funding Through Gitcoin Grants Matters ?
        • Red Team vs Blue Team
        • Legitimacy as a North Star for Gitcoin Grants
      • Gitcoin Grants Platform and Technology
      • Governance
        • Accepting Round Results
        • Making Policy Updates
        • Subjective Decisions
        • Accepting Workstreams
        • Stewards Role
        • Credible Neutrality
      • GitcoinDAO Role in Grants
      • Collection Levels & Participation Policies
        • Ecosystem Acceptance
        • Round Acceptance
        • Sub-Round Acceptance
        • Side-Round Acceptance
      • Grant Participation Policy
        • The Grant Approval Process
        • Platform Level Grant Participation Policy
        • Ecosystem Level Grant Participation Policy
          • Side Round Ecosystem Policy Documentation
            • Ethereum Ecosystem Participation Policy (GR11, GR10, GR9, etc.)
            • GitcoinDAO Ecosystem Participation Policy
            • All Exclusive Ecosystem Policy Documentation
      • User Participation Policy
        • Round User Participation Policy
        • Ethereum Ecosystem User Participation Policy Documentation
        • Ecosystem Level User Participation Policy
        • Platform Level User Participation Policy
        • User Disputes, Sanctions, and Appeals
      • Understanding Potential Attack Vectors
        • Fraud/Impersonation
        • Collusion Attack
        • Sybil Attack
        • Bribery/Quid Pro Quo
      • Fraud Deterrent Mechanisms
        • Trustbonus
        • Identity Requirements
        • Integration to DID
        • Pairwise Bounding
        • Minimum Donation
      • Active Defense Measures
        • Sybil Detection by Machine Learning
        • Crowdsourced Flagging
        • Human Review
      • The Fraud Tax
      • Community Oversight
      • Appeals
        • Introduction to Appeals
        • Introduction to Appeals for Denied Grants.
        • Appeal Process - Stage 1
        • Appeal Process - Stage 2
Powered by GitBook
On this page

Was this helpful?

  1. Gitcoin Token
  2. GTC FAQ

What is the GTC Issuance?

The Gitcoin token (GTC) is distributed to active participants in Gitcoin’s mission.

GTC has no economic value; it is a governance token used to oversee the Gitcoin ecosystem. It has no claim on financial rights.

The contract address of GTC is 0xde30da39c46104798bb5aa3fe8b9e0e1f348163f

Note: Please triple check the contract address when interacting with GTC. There are likely to be many malicious actors trying to leverage fake tokens to their benefit!

The total supply of GTC is 100,000,000 (100M) tokens, broken down as follows.

  • Retroactive Airdrop – 15%

  • Gitcoin DAO – 50%

  • Existing Stakeholders – 35%

The intent of this distribution is to split GTC evenly between past and future contributors. 50% to those who’ve built Gitcoin so far (retro + stakeholders) and 50% to the builders of tomorrow.

Retroactive Airdrop – 15,000,000 GTC (15%)

15% of the GTC supply is being retroactively distributed to past users of Gitcoin.

This allocation is broken down as follows:

ALLOCATION TYPE

ALLOCATION %

TOKEN COUNT

GMV (50/50)

72%

10,080,000

On-Platform Actions

20.4%

3,060,000

KERNEL

1.6%

240,000

Funders League

6%

900,000

Total

100%

15,000,000

(all users capped at 2% in each respective allocation group)

GMV – short for Gross Marketplace Value — describes any action in which value flowed through Gitcoin. This includes bounties, tips, hackathons, and grants. GMV allocations were split evenly between spenders and earners (50/50), meaning those who earned funds from Gitcoin split one bucket of GTC while those who spent funds (like donating to Grants) split another bucket.

On-platform actions refers to any user who:

  • Opened a bounty

  • Submitted work to a bounty

  • Opened a grant

  • Contributed to a grant

This piece (user activity) of the distribution included a decay, meaning actions performed early in Gitcoin’s lifecycle are weighted more heavily.

Projects who participated in the Funder’s League will split a GTC allocation. This was calculated by splitting total contribution amounts to the Funders League matching pool and issuing GTC pro rata.

Gitcoin’s DAO – 50,000,000 GTC (50%)

Half of the GTC supply will be deposited into the timelock contract held in the Gitcoin DAO treasury, governed directly through on-chain GTC voting.

The address of the Gitcoin DAO can be found at gitcoindao.eth.

GTC allocated to the Gitcoin DAO will become available for distribution in equal monthly installments over the course of the next 2 years, meaning the full allocation will be unlocked by ~May 25th, 2023.

Gitcoin will utilize a fork of Compound’s governance framework, meaning all proposals feature a 1% minimum proposal threshold, a 2.5% quorum and require a 51% majority to pass.

Simply put, this means that in order for a vote to be proposed on-chain, the proposer must hold at least 1% of GTC tokens. In order for that vote to pass, at least 2.5% of the GTC supply must vote on the proposal with 51% of the votes in favor of the winning decision.

Stakeholders — 35,000,000 GTC (35%)

The remainder of the Gitcoin supply is allocated to stakeholders of Gitcoin Holdings.

This includes allocations to the team, investors, future employees and strategic partners of Gitcoin. Anyone who has contributed to building Gitcoin in the past, from 2017 to 2021, is included in this allocation. This includes the core team who created the product, brand and market plus the investors who have funded the core team to the tune of $5mm (2017-2021) and $11.3m (2021 & beyond).

All GTC allocated to Gitcoin’s team members are subject to a vesting schedule of at least two years. All GTC allocated to Gitcoin’s existing stakeholders are non-transferrable for at least 500 days, or longer if Gitcoin’s Board of Directors determines that a longer period is necessary to comply with regulatory or other applicable restrictions.

PreviousWhat is the address of GTC?NextHow do I claim my token ?

Last updated 3 years ago

Was this helpful?

A portion of tokens are reserved for members of , to be allocated based on interactions and participation in Block I and Block II.

To claim GTC, head over to and follow the instructions.

Users will be required to take a trip through Quadratic Lands to claim their tokens, and will be met by a request to delegate tokens to themselves or one of the as a first use of GTC.

More details on this process will be shared in a separate post on .

KERNEL
quadraticlands.com
Gitcoin Stewards
gov.gitcoin.co