Contamination of crops soils by cadmium (Cd) is a worldwide threat to ecosystems and human health. High concentrations of Cd damage the cell membrane, organelles, and generate overproduction of reactive oxygen species. Talaromyces santanderensis, a recently fungal strain isolated from cocoa soil, is a new species of Cd resistant fungus with a high tolerance rating between 100–400 mg/kg. However, there is no molecular or genetic information about the mechanism used for tolerance. Thus, this study presents the first draft genome assembly and annotation of T. santanderensis. The genome of this strain was sequenced using Oxford Nanopore Technology with fungal DNA under stress conditions of Cd at 50 ppm, and under normal conditions of growth. The genome was assembled using Flye, Miniasm, NECAT, Wtdbg2 and Canu and produced assemblies exhibiting similarly high levels of BUSCO completeness (~96.5%) with a coverage of 20x on average. Flye presented the assembly with the highest contiguity featuring a N50 length of 8,443,216 bp and a maximum contig of 12,809,360 bp. The genome we present has a GC content of 45.16% and a size of 38,889,036 bp. Gene prediction yielded 13,791 genes, and through functional annotation we identified important homologous protein-coding genes reported to be associated with Cd resistance such as copper chaperone, arsenite and zinc transporter, arsenical resistance protein, and Cd2+-exporting ATPase. Additionally, we present T. santanderensis methylome for the modified bases 5mC and 5mhC during both conditions, which will give us information about the role of the epigenomic in adaptation to heavy metal environment.