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How to Bundle Buy on Raydium in 2026

Raydium is Solana's largest AMM DEX. Here is how to execute atomic bundle buys on Raydium pools, including pool creation bundling, CLMM strategies, and multi-wallet distribution.

By Jake Morrison 12 min read Bundle Strategy

Why Bundle Buy on Raydium

Raydium is the largest AMM DEX on Solana by trading volume and total value locked, making it the primary destination for tokens graduating from launchpad bonding curves. Bundle buying on Raydium captures early AMM positions at the moment a pool is created or when a token migrates from Pump.fun, PumpSwap, or other launchpads. The deep liquidity and high traffic on Raydium mean that early positions benefit from the broadest organic exposure.

Raydium occupies a central position in the Solana DeFi ecosystem. It serves as the AMM backbone for most Solana tokens, with integrations into Jupiter aggregator, Birdeye analytics, DexScreener, and virtually every other Solana trading tool. When a token has a Raydium pool, it appears automatically in these discovery platforms, providing exposure that smaller DEXs cannot match.

For token launchers, Raydium is often the destination after a bonding curve phase on Pump.fun or similar launchpads. The migration from bonding curve to Raydium AMM pool creates a specific opportunity window. The pool is created with initial liquidity from the bonding curve proceeds, and the first trades on the new pool determine the early price trajectory. Bundle buying at this moment captures the earliest positions on what becomes the token's primary trading venue.

For existing tokens, Raydium bundle buys allow you to accumulate positions across multiple wallets without the market impact of a single large purchase. By splitting your buy across 15-20 wallets executing in the same block, you generate the same total volume but create a more organic-looking buying pattern. This is valuable for tokens where a single large buy would be noticed and potentially front-run by other traders.

OpenLiquid's bundle bot supports both pool creation bundling (creating a Raydium pool and buying in the same Jito bundle) and existing pool bundling (buying into an established Raydium pool from multiple wallets). Both approaches use the same Jito atomic execution mechanism for guaranteed ordering and sniper protection.

Raydium Pool Types: Standard AMM vs CLMM

Raydium offers two pool types: Standard AMM (constant product x*y=k) and CLMM (Concentrated Liquidity Market Maker). Standard AMM pools spread liquidity across the entire price range, while CLMM pools allow liquidity providers to concentrate capital within specific price ranges. Both pool types support bundle buying, but the price impact and optimal strategy differ between them.

Standard AMM pools on Raydium are the most common for new token launches. The pool is created with a fixed ratio of tokens to SOL that sets the initial price. All liquidity is distributed uniformly from price zero to infinity. This means most of the liquidity is inactive at any given time, but the pool is simple to create and manage. Standard AMM pools use Raydium's OpenBook integration for order book liquidity alongside the AMM curve.

CLMM pools are Raydium's concentrated liquidity offering, similar to Uniswap V3. Liquidity providers choose specific price ranges for their capital, which means the pool can offer much tighter spreads and lower price impact within those ranges. For bundle buyers, CLMM pools with concentrated liquidity around the current price provide better execution — your buys experience less slippage per SOL than they would on a standard AMM pool with the same total TVL.

When bundle buying at pool creation, you typically create a standard AMM pool because the creation process is simpler and does not require managing tick ranges or concentrated positions. CLMM pool creation requires specifying initial tick ranges and concentrated positions, which adds complexity to the Jito bundle construction. OpenLiquid supports both, but recommends standard AMM for most launch-focused bundle buys.

For bundle buying on existing tokens, the bot automatically detects whether the target token trades on a standard AMM or CLMM pool and constructs swap transactions accordingly. If both pool types exist for the same token, the bot routes each buy through whichever pool provides the best execution price, potentially splitting buys across both pools within the same Jito bundle.

Pool Creation + Bundle Buy in One Block

One of the most powerful Raydium bundle strategies is combining pool creation and multi-wallet buying into a single Jito bundle. The first transaction creates the Raydium AMM pool with initial liquidity, and the remaining transactions buy tokens from the freshly created pool. This guarantees that your wallets are the first to trade on the new pool, with zero opportunity for snipers to front-run.

The pool creation bundle is the most secure form of bundle buying because there is literally no window between pool creation and your purchases. The Jito bundle executes atomically: the pool exists and your buys complete within the same block. No external transaction can interleave between the pool creation and your buys. This provides absolute certainty of execution ordering.

The Jito bundle structure for a pool creation bundle typically includes: Transaction 1 creates the Raydium AMM pool with your specified initial liquidity (token amount + SOL amount that sets the initial price). Transactions 2 through N are swap transactions from your bundle wallets, each purchasing tokens from the new pool. The SOL from these purchases goes to the pool, increasing its liquidity.

An important consideration for pool creation bundles is the initial price setting. The ratio of tokens to SOL in the pool creation transaction determines the starting price. Your subsequent bundle buys then push the price upward along the AMM curve. You need to plan both the initial price and the post-bundle price to ensure the final price is at an appropriate level for organic buyers to enter. Setting the initial price too low and buying aggressively creates a price that may be higher than justified by organic demand.

OpenLiquid's bundle bot provides a comprehensive preview for pool creation bundles. You specify the initial liquidity amounts (tokens + SOL), the number of buy wallets, and the SOL per wallet. The bot simulates the entire bundle execution and shows the initial pool price, the post-bundle price, your total token holdings across all wallets, and the effective cost per token. This preview helps you optimize parameters before committing to the irreversible pool creation.

Step-by-Step Raydium Bundle Setup

Setting up a Raydium bundle buy through OpenLiquid involves selecting the bundle type (pool creation or existing pool), configuring wallets and allocation, reviewing the simulation preview, and executing. For pool creation bundles, you also specify the initial liquidity parameters. The entire process is managed through the Telegram bot interface.

Step one: Open the OpenLiquid Telegram bot and select bundle buy. Choose Raydium as your target DEX. Select between pool creation bundle (if you are creating a new Raydium pool) or existing pool bundle (if the pool already exists). For existing pools, enter the pool address or token contract address.

Step two: Fund your master wallet. The bot displays your wallet address and the required amount: total SOL for buying across all wallets, plus initial liquidity SOL (for pool creation bundles), plus Jito tips and transaction fees. Transfer the full amount and wait for confirmation.

Step three: Configure buy parameters. Set the number of wallets (12-20 recommended), total SOL for buying, distribution pattern (randomized recommended), and slippage tolerance (1-3%). For pool creation bundles, also specify the token amount and SOL amount for the initial liquidity deposit that determines the starting price.

Step four: Review the simulation. OpenLiquid simulates the entire bundle execution and displays: initial pool price, post-bundle price, price impact percentage, total tokens acquired across all wallets, estimated supply percentage held, and complete fee breakdown. Adjust parameters until the preview matches your strategy. Pay special attention to the price impact — if it exceeds 15-20%, consider reducing the buy amount or increasing initial liquidity.

Step five: Execute. Confirm the bundle and OpenLiquid submits it to Jito validators. You receive real-time updates on bundle status. Upon confirmation, the bot displays a complete summary with all wallet holdings, transaction links, and the pool address for sharing. For post-bundle management, you can immediately configure sell targets, volume bot activation, or additional buy operations from the same interface.

Wallet Distribution and SOL Allocation

Wallet distribution for Raydium bundle buys should balance organic appearance with operational efficiency. Use 14-18 wallets with randomized SOL allocation. The distribution should mirror natural buying behavior: a few larger buyers, a cluster of medium-sized positions, and several small exploratory purchases. No single wallet should hold more than 5% of the token's circulating supply.

Raydium tokens are analyzed by sophisticated DeFi traders who use tools like Birdeye's holder analysis, Solscan's token page, and custom on-chain analytics. These traders look for patterns that indicate coordinated buying: wallets that all bought in the same block, similar position sizes, or wallets with no prior transaction history. Your distribution strategy should anticipate these checks.

A proven distribution pattern for a 6 SOL Raydium bundle across 16 wallets: four wallets at 0.55-0.65 SOL (appearing as confident early buyers), seven wallets at 0.25-0.35 SOL (appearing as moderate interest), and five wallets at 0.10-0.15 SOL (appearing as small speculative positions). This creates a natural Pareto-like distribution that matches organic buying patterns observed on Raydium.

For pool creation bundles specifically, keep in mind that the buy wallets are separate from the liquidity provision. Your initial liquidity comes from your master wallet and is locked in the pool. Your bundle buy wallets purchase tokens from that pool, receiving tradeable tokens. This means you need enough SOL for both the liquidity deposit and the bundle buys. Plan your total SOL allocation accordingly.

Consider the interaction between your pool creation liquidity and bundle buys. If you create a pool with 5 SOL of liquidity and then bundle buy 5 SOL worth of tokens, you have effectively doubled the SOL in the pool while extracting tokens. The resulting pool has 10 SOL of liquidity backing the remaining tokens, which provides deeper liquidity for subsequent organic trades. This deeper liquidity makes the token more attractive to traders evaluating the pool on DexScreener.

Price Impact Management on Raydium

Price impact is the most important variable to manage in Raydium bundle buys. Each buy in your bundle moves the AMM price upward, and the cumulative impact of all wallets determines the post-bundle price. For standard AMM pools, price impact scales quadratically with buy size relative to pool liquidity. Keeping total bundle buys below 10% of pool TVL ensures manageable price impact.

Raydium's standard AMM uses the constant product formula where price impact is determined by trade size relative to the pool reserves. A buy that represents 1% of the pool's SOL reserves creates approximately 2% price impact. A buy that represents 10% creates approximately 22% price impact. These are cumulative across your entire bundle — 15 wallets each buying 1% of reserves creates roughly 35% total price impact.

This cumulative impact means that bundle buy sizing must be calculated against pool liquidity, not in absolute SOL terms. A 5 SOL bundle buy on a pool with 100 SOL liquidity creates approximately 10% price impact, which is acceptable. The same 5 SOL bundle on a pool with 10 SOL liquidity creates over 100% price impact, which would double the token price and likely result in immediate selling pressure when organic buyers see the inflated price.

For pool creation bundles, you control both the initial liquidity and the buy amount, which gives you direct control over price impact. A common configuration is to create the pool with enough liquidity that your bundle buys represent 5-8% of the total pool TVL. This generates meaningful positions without excessive price distortion.

OpenLiquid's simulation engine calculates exact price impact for each wallet in your bundle, showing how the price changes with each sequential buy. This per-wallet breakdown helps you optimize the bundle: if the last wallets are experiencing excessive price impact, you can reduce their allocation or add more wallets with smaller individual sizes. The simulation also shows the total cost basis including price impact, giving you a realistic picture of your effective entry price across all wallets.

Anti-Sniper Protection on Raydium

Raydium sniper bots monitor for new pool creation events and token migration transactions, executing buy orders within the first block after a pool goes live. Jito bundle buying is the definitive defense: by packaging pool creation and buys into a single atomic bundle, your positions are secured before any external transaction can execute. Additional protection includes delayed pool announcement and immediate volume generation.

The Raydium sniper ecosystem is particularly active because Raydium is the primary migration destination for Pump.fun tokens. Snipers monitor Pump.fun bonding curves that are approaching the migration threshold and pre-stage buy transactions for the expected Raydium pool. The fastest Raydium snipers execute within the first block after pool creation, capturing early positions at the lowest available prices.

For pool creation bundles, your protection is absolute. The Jito bundle creates the pool and fills your buy orders in the same block, leaving zero blocks for snipers to exploit. This is the strongest possible anti-sniper position — the pool literally does not exist until your buys have already executed.

For migration bundles (where the pool is created by the Pump.fun migration transaction rather than by you), the protection is slightly different. OpenLiquid monitors the migration transaction and submits your Jito buy bundle for the immediately following block. While snipers may compete for the same block, Jito bundle transactions receive priority processing from validators. Combining a competitive Jito tip with OpenLiquid's optimized submission infrastructure provides a high success rate for first-block inclusion.

Post-bundle anti-sniper activity includes immediate activation of a volume bot to generate trading noise, and strategic small buys from additional wallets in subsequent blocks to maintain buying pressure. This continuous activity makes the token appear actively traded and reduces the perceived opportunity for sniper profits, discouraging later-block sniping attempts.

Post-Bundle Position Management

Post-bundle management on Raydium involves monitoring your wallet positions, executing a planned sell strategy across different price milestones, and coordinating with volume bot activity to maintain trading interest. The deep integration between Raydium and Solana analytics platforms means your post-bundle activity is highly visible and must appear organic.

Raydium tokens benefit from extensive analytics coverage. Birdeye, DexScreener, DEXTools, and Jupiter all display real-time trading data for Raydium pools. This visibility is advantageous for attracting organic buyers but also means that your selling activity from bundle wallets is equally visible. Large sells from wallets that bought in the first block are immediately recognized as potential insider selling.

Plan a multi-phase sell strategy before executing your bundle. Phase one (first 24 hours): hold all positions and focus on volume generation through OpenLiquid's volume bot to establish trading activity and attract organic interest. Phase two (24-72 hours): begin small sells from 2-3 wallets at 3-5x your entry price, representing profit-taking that looks like early buyers securing gains. Phase three (ongoing): systematic sells from remaining wallets at progressively higher milestones, spacing sells hours or days apart.

For tokens with growing organic communities, consider converting some bundle wallets into long-term hold positions. Wallets that visibly hold through price volatility build credibility when analyzed by potential buyers. Having 5-6 wallets that never sell creates a visible base of committed holders that supports the token's perceived strength on analytics platforms.

OpenLiquid provides integrated post-bundle tools for Raydium positions. Set conditional sell orders that trigger at specific price levels, activate volume bots on the same Raydium pool, and monitor all wallet positions from a single dashboard. The token creator and pricing page provide details on the full suite of launch-to-management tools available for Raydium tokens.

Key Takeaways

  • Raydium is Solana's largest AMM DEX, and bundle buying at pool creation provides the most secure early positions with zero sniper exposure through Jito atomic execution.
  • Pool creation bundles combine pool deployment and multi-wallet buying into a single block, guaranteeing your wallets trade before any external participant.
  • Price impact management is critical: keep total bundle buys below 10% of pool TVL to avoid excessive price distortion that discourages organic buyers.
  • Use 14-18 wallets with randomized allocation to create a natural holder distribution that passes scrutiny on Birdeye and Solscan analytics.
  • Post-bundle management should follow a phased approach: hold initially, sell small amounts at milestones, and maintain volume bot activity for organic attraction.
  • OpenLiquid supports both standard AMM and CLMM Raydium pools, automatically routing each buy through the optimal pool type for best execution.

Frequently Asked Questions

A bundle buy on Raydium is a coordinated multi-wallet purchase executed atomically through a Jito bundle on a Raydium AMM pool. All buy transactions execute in the same Solana block, guaranteeing your wallets secure positions before external traders or sniper bots can react to the new pool creation or your trading activity.

Bundle buy on Pump.fun when launching a new token through the bonding curve mechanism. Bundle buy on Raydium when your token is migrating from a bonding curve to a Raydium AMM pool, when you are creating a Raydium pool directly without a launchpad, or when you want to accumulate positions in an existing Raydium token across multiple wallets.

For bundle buying at pool creation, you control the initial liquidity. For bundle buying on existing pools, the pool should have enough liquidity that your total buy amount does not exceed 5-10% of the pool TVL to keep price impact manageable. A $10,000 pool can support approximately $500-$1,000 in total bundle buys without excessive slippage.

Yes. OpenLiquid can construct a Jito bundle where the first transaction creates the Raydium AMM pool with your initial liquidity, and subsequent transactions are buy orders from your bundle wallets. This ensures your wallets capture positions before anyone else can interact with the newly created pool.

For Raydium bundle buys, 12-20 wallets is optimal. Raydium AMM pools use the standard constant product formula, so each sequential buy in your bundle creates incrementally more price impact. More wallets with smaller individual buys spread this impact more evenly and create a more organic-looking holder distribution.

Raydium offers both standard AMM pools (constant product) and CLMM (Concentrated Liquidity Market Maker) pools. Bundle buying works with both, but CLMM pools may offer lower price impact per trade if liquidity is concentrated around the current price. OpenLiquid automatically detects the pool type and constructs appropriate swap instructions.

The main risks include price impact if your total buy amount is large relative to pool liquidity, Jito bundle failure during extreme network congestion (mitigated by automatic resubmission), and post-bundle price decline if organic demand does not materialize. Always use OpenLiquid preview feature to estimate price impact before executing, and plan your post-bundle strategy in advance.

Jake Morrison
Jake Morrison

Technical Writer

Smart contract developer turned technical writer. Building and documenting DeFi tools since 2021. Deep expertise in Solana programs, EVM smart contracts, and Telegram bot architecture.

Bundle Buy on Raydium with OpenLiquid

Pool creation bundling. Multi-wallet distribution. Jito atomic execution.

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