Tokenized RWAs in 369wallet — via 1inch routing, shipping next release
We're integrating 1inch's DEX aggregator as a routing layer inside 369wallet. Once it ships in the next release, users will be able to swap into tokenized real-world-asset tokens — including the on-chain Treasury exposure issued by Ondo Finance — directly from the wallet. Currently in testing.

369wallet is integrating 1inch's DEX aggregator as a routing layer inside the app. The integration is in active testing today and will ship in the next 369wallet release. When it lands, users will be able to swap into tokenized real-world-asset (RWA) tokens — including the on-chain US Treasury exposure issued by Ondo Finance — without leaving the wallet.
One thing to be precise about up front: this is a technical integration with a public protocol, not a partnership. 1inch is a public, permissionless DEX aggregator. We're routing through it the same way thousands of other applications do. There is no co-branded relationship, no commercial arrangement, and no privileged access — just well-engineered routing on top of an open public good.
What this unlocks
- Tokenized RWA exposure. Through 1inch's routing across DEX liquidity, the major tokenized RWA tokens — most prominently the US Treasury–backed tokens issued by Ondo Finance — become reachable from inside 369wallet. Users hold their existing balance, swap, and end up with the RWA token in the same self-custodial address.
- Best-execution routing. 1inch's aggregator splits orders across the venues with the deepest liquidity at swap time. For RWA tokens that trade across multiple pools, this materially affects price and slippage.
- One-tap UX. The wallet handles approvals, token discovery, and transaction signing. Users see a familiar swap surface, not a separate dApp connector flow.
- Self-custodial throughout. Funds never leave the user's 369wallet address. There is no escrow, no custody change, no off-platform transfer.
Why this matters for 369wallet users
Tokenized RWAs are one of the few asset categories where on-chain access has materially expanded the addressable user base versus traditional rails. The Ondo Finance tokens specifically — by representing tokenized US Treasury exposure on-chain — sit at the intersection of stable yield and crypto-native settlement. Reaching them previously required users to bridge to a dApp, manually find the right liquidity venue, and sign a separate transaction flow.
With 1inch routing inside 369wallet, that friction collapses to a swap.
How it works under the hood
- The wallet exposes a swap interface for any supported asset on 369wallet's chains.
- When the user picks an RWA token (or any token whose best route runs through 1inch), the wallet queries 1inch's quoting endpoints to find the optimal route.
- The wallet builds the transaction, the user signs locally, the transaction settles on-chain.
- The resulting RWA token lands in the same 369wallet address. From there it composes with everything else 369wallet supports — sending, receiving, staking where applicable, and (eventually) Hot Wallet Rate accrual.
Where this fits in the bigger picture
369wallet's design has been to make adjacent on-chain markets reachable as first-class wallet primitives, not as side dApps. We've done it for prediction markets via predict.fun; we've done it for fiat on/off-ramps via Transak; the 1inch routing layer extends that pattern to general DEX routing — and, as a useful side effect, opens the door to RWAs.
Status
- Testing — the routing integration is being exercised against live 1inch quotes and live RWA pools today. The team is hardening edge cases (slippage tolerance defaults, gas estimation, failed-route fallbacks) before promotion.
- Next release — ships in the next major 369wallet Android release. iOS lands once the platform's general availability clears App Store review.
"The right kind of integration disappears. Users shouldn't notice they're routing through 1inch any more than they notice their car has fuel injection — they just notice it works." — 369wallet team
Questions about the integration are best directed at @369Wallet. We'll publish a release note here on the day the build ships.
Get 369wallet on Google Play →
— The 369wallet product & engineering team