Solana (SOL) is an integrated, open-source Layer-1 network with the goal of synchronizing global information at the speed of light. Solana optimizes for increasing bandwidth and reducing latency. It accomplishes this through features such as its novel timestamp mechanism called Proof-of-History (PoH), a block propagation protocol Turbine, and parallel transaction processing. Since mainnet launch in March 2020, several network upgrades have brought further network performance and resilience, including QUIC, stake-weighted Quality of Service (QoS), and local fee markets.
Development and growth of the network and its ecosystem are supported by the non-profit Solana Foundation, for-profit Solana Labs, and various third-party organizations, including Anza, Colosseum, Helius, and Superteam. Solana Labs has raised over $335 million in private and public token sales. Solana features a growing ecosystem of projects across many sectors, including DeFi, consumer, DePIN, and payments. To stay up-to-date with all things Solana, visit the Solana Portal.
Key MetricsChain GDP is defined as the total application revenue generated on a network. In Q1 2025, Solana’s Chain GDP grew 20% QoQ from $971 million to $1.2 billion. January was the highest-earning month, bringing in $699 million in revenue to applications on the protocol. The leaders by application revenue in Q1’25 were as follows:
These applications’ revenue is directly correlated to increases in speculation as they facilitate the trading of assets. This was especially apparent when TRUMP and MELANIA launched. Average daily DEX volume (USD) in January grew to $8.3 billion, a 153.4% increase from the average in Q4’24.
App Revenue Capture Ratio (App RCR)
A network’s App Revenue Capture Ratio (RCR) is the ratio of revenue generated by its apps to its Real Economic Value (REV). REV is defined as the sum of base transaction fees, priority fees, and MEV tips paid to validators. App RCR reflects the efficiency with which applications capitalize on the economic activity taking place on the network. The higher the app RCR, the more effectively apps capture the economic activity being generated on the network, suggesting a mature ecosystem with monetizable applications. A low App RCR may signal untapped potential for app developers or inefficiencies in revenue capture. Alternatively, it may signal a nascent ecosystem not yet ready for monetization.
If App RCR equals 20%, this implies that for every $1 of REV generated by the network, $0.20 is captured as revenue by apps. In Q1 2025, App RCR on Solana was 142.8%, a 21% QoQ increase from 117.6% in Q4’24. This can be interpreted as when $100 is spent in transaction fees (and/or Jito tips) to interact with Solana, applications earn $142.80 in revenue.
A network’s App RCR can be greater than 1 when its applications are successful in monetizing activity, driving revenue streams for project teams and potentially, tokenholders. For example, DEXs charging swap fees or NFT marketplaces imposing marketplace fees in excess of transaction fees paid to Solana.
DeFiDeFi TVL (USD) on Solana fell 64% QoQ to $6.6 billion. Still, it ranked second among networks after surpassing TRON in November 2024. DeFi TVL (SOL) grew by 18% QoQ to 53 million SOL.
Average daily spot DEX volume (USD) grew 41% QoQ to $4.6 billion in Q1 2025. This growth can be attributed to the memecoin craze being reignited following the November 2024 U.S. presidential election and continuing into the launch of the TRUMP token in January 2025. On Jan. 18, Solana DEXs did $36 billion in volume, which puts it at about 10% of Nasdaq’s daily volume.
Raydium’s average daily volume increased by 5% QoQ to $2.0 billion with a 43% market share. Read more about Raydium’s recent developments in our State of Raydium Q4 2024 report. Orca saw a 45% increase ($904 million) QoQ in average daily volume, with a market share of 20%. Meteora became the DEX with the third-highest quarterly volume after increasing 3047% QoQ to $839 million and a 18% market share. This was mainly led by the TRUMP, MELANIA, and LIBRA tokens, which launched directly on Meteora.
PumpFun dropped to the fifth-largest DEX by quarterly volume on Solana after decreasing by 11% QoQ in Q1 to $187 million. On March 20, 2025, the team launched PumpSwap. PumpSwap replaced Raydium as the sole trading venue of PumpFun tokens that graduate past their bonding curve. In the last week of the quarter, Pump.fun and Pumpswap averaged $279 million in average daily volume, compared to Raydium at $334 million.
The Jupiter team acquired SonarWatch, Moonshot, Ape Pro, and Drip in Q1’25, aiming to become the Solana DeFi super app. However, Jupiter fell to being the secondary trade source by Q1 spot DEX volume on Solana, with 24% of Q1 spot DEX volume being initiated via the protocol. Raydium took over as the primary trade source on Solana, accounting for 31% of Q1 spot DEX volumes. In March, Titan unveiled its Meta DEX Aggregator which claimed their algorithm beats competitors 80% of the time. Titan’s private beta is now live.
Jupiter averaged $1 Billion in daily perp trading volume (USD), a 14% QoQ increase, ending the quarter with a 79.2% market share. Other main perpetual future exchanges include:
Stablecoin market cap on Solana grew by 145% QoQ to $12.5 billion, ranking it 3rd among networks. Much of this growth came after the TRUMP token launched on Jan. 17, which brought an influx of liquidity to Solana and resulted in various high-liquidity pairs using USDC. The sustained increase in stablecoin market cap indicates much of the new capital remained on the network.
USDC ended the quarter with a market cap of $9.7 billion after growing by 148% QoQ with a 77% market share. USDT was the second largest stablecoin on Solana by the end of Q1'25, with $2.3 billion (a 154% QoQ increase) and an 18% market share. Ondo’s USDY claimed the third spot by ending the quarter with $177 million (a 65% QoQ increase). PayPal’s PYUSD was the only top-five stablecoin to fall this quarter, ending with $130 million (a 25% QoQ decrease). USDS, the rebranded stablecoin from Sky Protocol (formerly known as DAI from MakerDAO), launched on Solana in November and ended the quarter with a $117 million market cap.
In February, Paxos’s new USD-backed stablecoin, USDG, went live. Paxos created a Singaporean entity for launching this new stablecoin, which received approval from the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS). USDG will power the Global Dollar Network (GDN), a stablecoin consortium cofounded by Paxos, Robinhood, Kraken, Anchorage Digital, Galaxy Digital, Bullish and Nevei. USDG ended Q1 with an $83.9 million market cap.
Liquid StakingThe liquid staking rate on Solana increased 15% QoQ, from 9.1% to 10.4%. With 64% of SOL’s circulating supply staked, a growing liquid staking rate enables a DeFi ecosystem built on yield-bearing SOL.
Average daily NFT trading volume (USD) on Solana fell 33% QoQ to $1.8 million in Q1 2025. Magic Eden took the majority share with $62 million, a 27% QoQ decrease. Tensor’s trading volume decreased 77% QoQ to $26 million. While overall volume is down, NFTs on Solana lead on creator royalties.
Solana continues to be a hub for DePIN applications, hosting Helium, Hivemapper, GEODNET, Render, Nosana, Jambo, NATIX, and more. Notable Q1’25 events include:
With low transaction costs, sub-second finality, and a network of several thousand nodes, Solana aims to power mainstream payment flows. Notable events from Solana-native payments infrastructure companies and applications this quarter include:
DeSci (Decentralized Science) is an emerging movement to reimagine how scientific research is funded, published, reviewed, and accessed - using web3 models for financing and monetization. Notable events from the Solana DeSci space include:
Notable infrastructure-related events from Q1 2025 include:
In Q1 2025, 11 projects announced funding rounds, a 48% QoQ decrease. These projects raised a combined $36 million, a 13% QoQ increase.
In November 2024, Messari launched the Solana Portal. Users can use this to keep up to date on all things qualitative and quantitative within the ecosystem. Notable recent events include:
Notable Q1’25 institutional events:
Network activity, measured by non-vote transactions and fee payers, saw relatively flat metrics in Q1 2025. Average daily fee payers decreased 22% QoQ to 4.0 million, and average daily new fee payers fell 34% QoQ to 2.5 million. Average daily non-vote transactions increased 17% to 95.3 million.
The average transaction fee decreased by 24% QoQ to 0.000189 SOL ($0.04), and the median transaction fee decreased by 7% QoQ to 0.000008 SOL ($0.0015). There was a spike in average transaction fees in January when the TRUMP token launched before President Trump took office. On Jan. 19th, the average fee paid was $0.41, however, the median fee paid was $0.003, highlighting the power of local fee markets. Helius was able to consistently land 100% of transactions during this period with fees as low as $0.001.
Security and DecentralizationTotal stake (USD) hit an all time high of $102 billion on Jan. 18th when SOL hit all-time highs around $295. Staked SOL (USD) decreased 35% QoQ to $48 billion in Q1’25, down from $74 billion at the end of Q4’24. Total stake (SOL) fell 1% QoQ, from 389 million to 385 million.
The Nakamoto coefficient is the minimum number of nodes needed to break liveness. The metric can also be measured across other dimensions important to the resilience of a validator network, including distribution of stake by location, hosting provider, and clients.
In H2’24, the Nakamoto coefficient on Solana fell to 18, an all-time low since 2021. However, Solana’s Nakamoto coefficient ended Q1’25 at 20, which is above the median of other networks. Solana’s 1,302 active validators (down 7% QoQ) are hosted in 40 countries. Solana validators are hosted in 253 unique data centers, down 7% QoQ, and its hosting data center Nakamoto coefficient stayed flat at 7.
Performance, Upgrades, and RoadmapAgave UpdatesIn Sept. 2024, the Anza team announced at Breakpoint that Agave V2.0 is live on Solana Testnet and Devnet. Over October 2024, validators started to upgrade to V2.0 on mainnet. This new client version completes the transition from the Solana Labs repository, which has been archived and can no longer be used. Currently, most of the changes involve removing and renaming RPC endpoints, SDK calls, crates, and validator arguments. At the time of writing, over 90% of validators are running a V2.0 or later version, with 75% of validators running the most recent release of 2.1.21. Technically, most of the network stake is running the Jito-Solana client, an Agave fork optimized for MEV.
Firedancer/Frankendancer UpdatesBeyond improvements to the Agave client, the network is set to benefit from upcoming clients being created from scratch. Notably, Jump Crypto is developing Firedancer in C. At Breakpoint 2024 in September 2024, Jump provided an update on the client's development.
Frankendancer, a version of Firedancer that includes parts of Agave code, has been live on Solana mainnet since September 2024. Additionally, Firedancer is fully live on testnet, and live on mainnet in a non-voting mode. This means the client can listen to the network and replay blocks in real-time. There were 33 validators running Frankendancer in April 2025, with a full launch expected at the end of Q2’25.
SIMDs
SOL’s circulating market cap fell 30% QoQ to $64 billion. Although the circulating market cap fell throughout the quarter, the token price hit an all-time high on Jan. 19 with a price of $295 and a circulating market cap of $128 billion, making it the 5th most valuable cryptocurrency. However, at the end of Q1 2025, SOL fell to 6th among all cryptocurrencies by circulating market cap, behind BTC, ETH, USDT, XRP, and BNB.
Real Economic Value (REV), which is the sum of base transaction fees, priority transaction fees, and MEV tips paid to validators, decreased 1% QoQ in SOL terms to 4 million ($816 million). Of this, 45% came from transaction fees, with the rest coming from MEV tips.
FTX EstateIn Q2’24, the FTX Estate auctioned off the remaining tokens acquired from the Solana Foundation and Solana Labs. In April 2024, it was reported that the Estate sold 30 million SOL at $64 per token, with a later sale of 1.8 million SOL at prices between $95 and $110 also reported. In May 2025, it was reported that the Estate had sold the last of its tokens, with one purchaser reportedly paying $102 per token. Reported buyers among the sales have included Pantera Capital, Figure Markets, Galaxy Trading, and Neptune Digital. The tokens sold are subject to the same unlock schedules as the original purchases by Alameda and FTX. The average unlock date of the tokens is in Q4’25, with March 2025 featuring the most unlocks of any month (11.2 million tokens, around $1.6 billion). The next-largest unlock is in May 2025 (74,000 tokens, around $11 million). Upcoming unlocks can be viewed on Messari’s Solana Portal.
SOL ETFAll SOL ETFs that applied before the election were denied. However, with a crypto-friendly administration, the likelihood of a SOL ETF being approved has drastically increased. Per Polymarket, the odds of an ETF being approved before July 31, 2025, ended Q1’25 at 32%. Meanwhile, the odds of an ETF being approved in 2025 ended Q1’25 at 82%. On Feb. 11, 2025 ,the SEC officially acknowledged four spot ETFs from Canary, Vaneck, Bitwise, and 21Shares. In April 2025, the SEC also acknowledged Fidelity’s spot SOL ETF. The SEC has also acknowledged Grayscale’s application to convert its Solana Trust into a spot ETF. Most of these applications have an approval decision expected to be announced by October 2025.
SOL StrategiesOn Sept. 12, 2024, the Canadian-traded company Cypherpunk Holdings rebranded to SOL Strategies, representing its bet on the Solana ecosystem. SOL Strategies' strategy is similar to Microstrategy’s; however, it is going a step further by staking its SOL tokens, of which it holds over 267,000, and investing in projects in the ecosystem. This strategy has gained momentum as multiple other firms have followed suit with many announcements in April 2025, including DeFi Development Company (previously Janover), Upexi, GSR, and Galaxy Digital).
Closing SummaryIn Q1 2025, DeFi TVL decreased 64% QoQ to $6.6 billion, though TVL (SOL) rose 18%, maintaining Solana’s rank as the second-largest network by DeFi TVL. Chain GDP increased 20% QoQ as applications earned $1.2 billion, driven largely by speculative activity in January during the TRUMP token craze. DeFi saw an extremely active quarter as average daily DEX volume (USD) increased 40.8% QoQ to $4.6 billion, and the stablecoin market cap increased 145.2% to $12.5 billion. Network usage saw mixed results as average daily non-vote transactions grew 17% QoQ, while average daily fee payers declined 22%. The liquid staking rate increased from 9.1% to 10.4%, led by continued growth in Jito’s jitoSOL product.
Infrastructure developments included the widespread adoption of the Agave V2.0 client and early mainnet deployment of Firedancer components. Governance votes on reward distribution and inflation mechanisms reflected increased stakeholder participation. Financially, SOL’s market cap fell 30% QoQ to $64 billion. External factors such as the FTX estate token sales and emerging interest in SOL-based ETFs influenced market dynamics. Overall, Solana’s ecosystem showed resilience in core metrics while facing a decline in some financial indicators during the quarter. To stay up-to-date with all things Solana, visit Messari's Solana Portal.
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