Despite Broader Downturn, Solana Sees Unprecedented First-Quarter Activity Surge, Bolstered by Soaring Developer Earnings

Table of Contents Solana Q1 performance remained surprisingly resilient even as broader crypto markets experienced sharp corrections. On-chain activity held steady across multiple metrics, including transaction volume, fee payers, and application revenue. While token prices faced pressure, the underlying network continued to process record activity. This divergence between price and fundamentals has drawn attention from analysts tracking the chain’s long-term trajectory heading into Q2 2025. Daily non-vote transactions on Solana reached a new all-time high in Q1. The network printed 112.6 million average daily non-vote transactions, up 50% quarter-over-quarter. That figure alone signals that user activity was not slowing down despite market conditions. Chain GDP stayed nearly flat at approximately $342.2 million for the quarter. Daily fee payers also held steady at around 2.2 million, showing consistent demand for block space. These numbers suggest the network maintained a stable base of active users. Crypto analyst Kaff posted on X, noting that apps on Solana were “still making real money,” with launchpads alone generating roughly $144 million. Why ppl suddenly want to send $SOL to zero while the chain itself didn’t really look dead in Q1? > printed a new ATH in average daily non-vote txs at 112.6M, up 50% QoQ> chain GDP stayed almost flat around ~$342.2M while market was nuking> daily fee payers basically held flat… pic.twitter.com/bIlynbsuup — Kaff 📊 (@Kaffchad) May 24, 2026 That figure represented about 42% of total Solana application revenue for the quarter. Solana’s App Revenue-to-Chain Revenue ratio also rose to 382%, meaning applications captured far more value than the base layer itself. Trading platforms continued to lead in revenue generation. Pump.fun brought in $124.7 million, up 17% QoQ, while Axiom Exchange posted $42.4 million, up 36%. Raydium generated $34.6 million, Phantom earned $23.4 million, and Jupiter recorded $23.1 million across a broader revenue mix. Beyond trading, real-world assets are drawing serious institutional interest on Solana. RWA market cap on the chain grew 43% quarter-over-quarter, reaching approximately $2.01 billion. BlackRock’s BUIDL fund doubled to $525.4 million after Anchorage Digital added custody support. Kamino Finance saw only an 8% decline in the quarter while integrating PRIME and ONyc into its DeFi infrastructure. That positions it as a growing hub for institutional-grade liquidity on Solana. Tokenized card and collectible platforms also saw activity, with Collector Crypt capturing 89% of that segment. Payments represent another area gaining momentum. Visa, Stripe, Worldpay, Western Union, Fiserv, and PayPal have all moved closer to Solana-based settlement and product development. The network also added support for x402 and Stripe’s Machine Payments Protocol, making it compatible with both major agent payment standards. DePIN revenue reached $9.1 million in Q1, up 28%, led by Helium and GEODNET. Perpetuals DEX volume fell 29% QoQ to roughly $1.14 billion daily, though GM Trade saw its daily volume surge over 8,000% after pivoting toward RWA-based perpetuals.