T2 Metals Corp. announced completion of targeting for an upcoming drill program at the Cora copper project in Pinal County, Arizona. Permit applications for the drill program are being submitted with the Bureau of Land Management (Tucson Office) to allow for the construction of up to five drill sites and associated access.

In parallel, the Company is evaluating contracts for drill pad construction and core drilling. Cora lies 75km NNE of Tucson within the heart of the southern Arizona copper belt, surrounded by many of North America's largest copper mines and development projects. The project is 100% owned by the Company, secured by 46 granted BLM lode mining claims covering a total of 3.84 sq km.

Cora is characterized by a broad area of copper oxide/carbonate mineralization under shallow cover to the immediate east of the North Star copper mine Copper mineralization was discovered at Cora by a set of core and open ("churn") drill holes completed drilled during the 1950's and 1960's. The mineralization style exposed at the North Star and described in drill logs suggest Cora has the potential to host porphyry copper style mineralization buried under alluvial cover. The prospectivity of the Cora target was enhanced by a geophysical survey (aeromagnetic and radiometric) completed by T2 Metals during 2022. The aeromagnetic data defined a discrete oval shaped magnetic low interpreted to be approximately 1.5km x 1.5km in size and corresponding in part with the area of oxide copper mineralization drilled by California Steel Co.

in the 1950s. The magnetic low is interpreted to correspond to an intrusive body, strongly supporting a buried copper porphyry style target. Original exploration company records held by the Geological Survey of Arizona indicate past drilling at Cora intersected oxide copper mineralization over widths in excess of 100 m, beneath shallow alluvial cover, over an area of at least 1km by 1km.

Intervals include: · DH5: 99.7m (327ft) @ 0.28% Cu*, below 10.7m of alluvial cover (California Steel Co., 1950s) · DH4: 39.6m (130ft) @ 0.38% Cu*, below 47.2m of alluvial cover (California Steel Co., 1950s) · DH1: 225.5m (740ft) @ 0.29% Cu*, below 42.7m of alluvial cover (California Steel Co., 1950s) The shallow depth of cover is supported by CSAMT profiles which highlight the sub-surface cover-bedrock contact.