Hyperliquid and BNB Chain capture majority of L1 fees as Solana fades amid derivatives boom

Partner offers
The Block may may earn a commission if you use our partner offers, at no extra cost to you.

Quick Take

  • Solana’s memecoin trading ecosystem began declining earlier this year, arguably after the launch of the TRUMP token.
  • The following is excerpted from The Block’s Data and Insights newsletter.

The landscape of fees generated by major Layer 1 blockchains has shifted tremendously this year.

Earlier in the year, Solana generated over 50% of the fees among major L1s, yet it now makes up just 9% of the total. The reason for this decline can be attributed, in part, to fierce competition from both Hyperliquid and BNB Chain.

Earlier in the year, Hyperliquid and BNB Chain combined represented around 10% of the total fees generated among major L1s. As of last week, they each made up over 40% and 20% of the total, respectively.

This shift was likely caused by a multitude of factors in market appetite, user preferences, and structural changes that significantly impacted flows.

The first and most obvious sign of change was the fading of Solana's memecoin trading boom from earlier this year, which arguably peaked with the launch of the TRUMP memecoin. The chain has failed to regain that level of activity since.

Moreover, derivatives trading generates meaningfully higher fees per unit of activity than memecoin trading, so even moderate user growth on Hyperliquid, and more recently, BNB Chain with Aster, can swing the fee share quickly. BNB Chain has also benefited greatly from Binance Alpha and Binance Wallet, as an integrated on-ramp with the largest centralized exchange in crypto likely funneled significant retail flows and activity onchain.

Over the next several months, Solana will likely require a native dApp to catch significant adoption and attention velocity that could bring flows back to the network, or another Solana-centric speculative cycle akin to late 2024/early 2025. Failure of either option likely means Hyperliquid and BNB Chain continue to keep a large share of the fees generated among major L1s away from Solana, especially if crypto market volatility rises and derivatives volumes stay high.

This is an excerpt from The Block's Data & Insights newsletter. Dig into the numbers making up the industry's most thought-provoking trends.


Disclaimer: The Block is an independent media outlet that delivers news, research, and data. As of November 2023, Foresight Ventures is a majority investor of The Block. Foresight Ventures invests in other companies in the crypto space. Crypto exchange Bitget is an anchor LP for Foresight Ventures. The Block continues to operate independently to deliver objective, impactful, and timely information about the crypto industry. Here are our current financial disclosures.

© 2025 The Block. All Rights Reserved. This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

AUTHOR

Brandon joined crypto research in 2021 and specializes in DeFi and emergent, up-and-coming projects and technologies in the space.

See More
Connect on

AUTHOR

Ivan joined The Block in 2024 as a researcher. He was previously a consultant at KPMG Canada in the Crypto and Blockchain Center of Execellence where he advised financial institutions on blockchains and tokenization. He graduated from the University of Toronto.

See More
Connect on

Editor

To contact the editors of this story: Jason Shubnell at [email protected], Daniel Kuhn at [email protected]

WHO WE ARE

The Block is a news provider that strives to be the first and final word on digital assets news, research, and data.

+ Follow us on Google News
Connect with the block on