Solana transfers $650B in stablecoins – Liquidity flows away from Ethereum
2min ReadRising stablecoin flows show digital dollars evolving from trading tools into primary liquidity rails across crypto markets.
Posted: March 9, 2026
By: Muriuki Lazaro
Journalist
Edited By: Saman Waris
Muriuki Lazaro
Journalist
Edited By: Saman Waris
Posted: March 9, 2026
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Stablecoin transaction flows have expanded rapidly across major blockchains, reflecting growing demand for digital dollar settlement.
As adoption expanded, activity accelerated through late 2024 and early 2025.
Combined monthly volumes regularly approached $700 billion, led primarily by Ethereum [ETH] and Tron [TRX].

Source: Grayscale
However, the structure began shifting during 2025 as Solana’s [SOL] settlement activity increased steadily. Low fees and high throughput encouraged payment flows and trading pairs to migrate toward faster rails.
Momentum intensified toward the end of 2025, when aggregate stablecoin volumes neared $1 trillion monthly. At this stage, Solana’s share expanded rapidly alongside rising on-chain commerce.
The trend culminated in February, when Solana processed roughly $650 billion in stablecoin transactions, surpassing competing networks.
Together, rising settlement volumes suggest stablecoins are increasingly functioning as operational payment infrastructure rather than purely trading liquidity.
Stablecoins emerge as crypto’s primary settlement layer
The surge in stablecoin settlement provides critical context for the transaction growth observed across blockchain networks.
Over the past two years, stablecoins have evolved from trading instruments into operational liquidity for payments, trading, and treasury management.
This shift appears clearly in transaction flows. During early 2024, adjusted stablecoin transfers ranged between $300 billion and $500 billion monthly.
As financial use cases expanded, activity accelerated through 2025, frequently approaching $1 trillion per month.
By February, global stablecoin volume reached roughly $1.8 trillion, signaling deeper financial integration.
Source: Binance Square
Several forces drive this expansion. Exchanges increasingly route liquidity through USDC and USDT pairs, while DeFi protocols rely on stablecoins for collateral and settlement.
Meanwhile, institutional infrastructure reinforces these flows. Visa expanded USDC settlement to U.S. banks, allowing regulated institutions to process blockchain-based dollar transfers.
For markets and participants, this implies stablecoins are becoming the default monetary layer for digital finance, shaping liquidity flows, trading structure, and cross-platform capital movement.