ñ,N,N-Trimethyltryptamine (ñ,N,N-TMT, ñ-TMT, or ATMT), also known as ñ-methyl-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (ñ-methyl-DMT or ñ-Me-DMT) or as Alpha-N, is a psychedelic drug of the tryptamine and ñ-alkyltryptamine families. It is similar in chemical structure to other psychedelic tryptamines such as N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and ñ-methyltryptamine (ñMT). It is taken orally.
ñ,N,N-TMT was briefly mentioned by Alexander Shulgin in his 1997 book TiHKAL (Tryptamines I Have Known and Loved), but he did not mention having tested it and did not describe its effects, dose, or duration. In 2025, Hamilton Morris described having synthesized and assayed ñ,N,N-TMT. He reported that it was an active psychedelic taken orally but was much less potent than AMT.
The drug has been tested in animals and compared with ñ-methyltryptamine (ñMT). It was found to produce similar effects as ñMT, such as hyperlocomotion and reversal of reserpine-induced behavioral depression, but with only around half the potency of ñMT.
Analogues of ñ,N,N-TMT (N,N-dimethyl-AMT) include ñ-methyltryptamine (AMT), ñ,N-DMT (N-methyl-AMT), ñ-methylserotonin (AMS; 5-HO-AMT), 5-MeO-AMT (ñ,O-DMS), ñ,N,O-TMS (N-methyl-5-MeO-AMT), and ñ,N,N,O-TeMS (N,N-dimethyl-5-MeO-AMT), among others.
ñ,N,N-TMT was encountered as a novel designer drug in Europe by 2015.
ñ,N,N-TMT is not an explicitly nor implicitly controlled substance in Canada as of 2025.
ñ,N,N-TMT is not an explicitly controlled substance in the United States. However, it could be considered a controlled substance under the Federal Analogue Act if intended for human consumption.