TinOne Resources Inc. announced plans for upcoming drill programs at its 100%-owned Aberfoyle and Great Pyramid projects, located in the tier-one mining jurisdiction of Tasmania, Australia. Highlights: Inaugural drill program at the Guinea Pig prospect: A series of systematic short reverse circulation ("RC") holes designed to test the near-surface lithium-tin mineralization potential of the broad zones of greisen alteration. Follow-up RC drilling program planned for Great Pyramid: A series of short RC holes designed to test for structurally-controlled high-grade tin mineralization as well as to verify historical drill data.

Drill Program: An RC drill program across two projects (Aberfoyle and Great Pyramid) in Northeast Tasmania has been designed to systematically test for near-surface tin ± lithium mineralization. Details are as follows: Aberfoyle: The Company plans to drill approximately 500 metres in six RC drill holes to test the lithium-tin mineralization potential of widespread greisens at the Guinea Pig prospect, Aberfoyle Project. Holes will be collared across a 200 metre trend targeting out-cropping zones of strong lithium-tin mineralization.

Surface sampling to date has defined an area of approximately 12 hectares where numerous rock samples returned results of >0.20% Li2O. Preliminary interpretations indicate that the higher-grade mineralization occurs in NNW-trending parallel zones of up to 250 metres in strike length, although the true strike-extent is not presently known. The planned drill program is designed to investigate the near-surface orientation and scale of the mineralized zones at the Guinea Pig prospect.

The Guinea Pig prospect is an old working, which along with the Triabunna workings was previously reported as the Dead Pig prospect. Great Pyramid: A 350 metre RC drill program is planned at the Great Pyramid tin project with two primary objectives: Five holes are designed to replace and verify early percussion drilling. These new data will increase the data confidence from historical drill programs, as recommended by the mineral resource estimate consultants, Mining Associates.

The Company believes that an increase in confidence will underpin a re-estimation of a significant part of the current Inferred Resource to a higher status. No significant track access or pad preparation work is required as the holes will be drilled on pre-existing sites. Five holes are designed to test for the presence of high-grade, fault-related tin mineralization associated with the project-scale Pyramid Hill Fault, which transects the project through at least 400 metres of favorable sandstone.

The fault dips steeply to the southwest. Very few historical holes have drilled through the Pyramid Hill Fault as it trends orthogonal (at right angles) to the strike of the mineralised joints and veinlets. Most previous drilling at Great Pyramid was therefore parallel to the fault rather than across it.

The Company interprets that the very high tin grades in 22GPRC012 (78m @ 0.51% Sn incl. 23m @ 1.09% Sn are hosted in the Pyramid Hill Fault, which was intersected at a relatively shallow angle. No past explorers have targeted high-grade tin mineralization at Great Pyramid.

Timing: The multi-project drill program is set to commence in mid-June with the drill to mobilize first to Aberfoyle. The Company anticipates the program to be completed within a month and results to be reported once assays have been returned from the lab and have been compiled and interpreted.