Recognition and activation of nucleotides by polyammonium receptors constitute an important target in supramolecular chemistry since the very beginning of this field. Nucleotides have three components: (i) the polyphosphate chain, (ii) the sugar moiety, and (iii) the nucleobase, which permit their multipoint binding through attractions between opposite charges, hydrogen bonding, π‐stacking, CH–π interactions, and so on. In this chapter, different receptors for nucleotides, most but not all of them consisting polyamines, are examined, focusing on their molecular structure that enables different binding modes to be operated. Also, a number of examples of nucleotide binding through metal complex formation are presented and discussed. The ATPase and/or kinase activity of abiotic molecules, in particular, of the macrocycle O‐BISDIEN, is briefly introduced. In the last part of the chapter, examples of receptors that are able to selectively sense nucleotides through different operational mechanisms are presented.