- Solana and Ethereum are now processing nearly identical monthly DEX trading volume at roughly $45 billion each
- Solana’s DEX volume has fallen to 94% of Ethereum’s after peaking at 218% back in January
- The shift suggests Ethereum is regaining momentum as speculative Solana trading cools off
Ethereum has quietly caught back up to Solana in decentralized exchange activity after months of Solana dominating onchain trading volume earlier this year.

According to GSR head of content Frank Chaparro, monthly DEX trading volumes across both networks are now sitting near identical levels at roughly $45 billion each. That marks a significant reversal from January, when Solana’s DEX activity surged to an enormous 218% of Ethereum’s trading volume during the peak of the meme coin frenzy.
Solana’s Trading Frenzy Is Cooling Off
The sharp drop from 218% dominance to roughly 94% suggests Solana’s explosive trading momentum has cooled substantially over the past few months. Much of Solana’s earlier surge was driven by intense speculative activity tied to meme coins, Pump.fun launches, and ultra-high-frequency retail trading.
As that speculative cycle slowed, trading activity naturally began normalizing.
Solana still remains one of the most active blockchain ecosystems in crypto, but the pace seen earlier this year was always difficult to sustain indefinitely.
Ethereum Is Quietly Rebuilding Momentum
At the same time, Ethereum appears to be regaining strength as institutional activity, tokenized assets, stablecoins, and large-scale DeFi liquidity continue concentrating heavily on the network.
Ethereum still dominates many of the industry’s most important infrastructure categories, including tokenized Treasuries, stablecoin settlement, institutional DeFi, and onchain asset issuance.

That broader foundation may be helping Ethereum stabilize DEX activity even while retail speculation rotates between different chains.
The Competition Is Becoming More Balanced
The changing numbers also highlight how crypto market structure is evolving beyond a simple “Ethereum killer” narrative. Instead of one network fully replacing another, different blockchains increasingly appear to specialize in different forms of activity.
Solana remains extremely strong for fast retail trading, meme coin activity, and lower-cost consumer applications. Ethereum, meanwhile, continues functioning as the primary settlement and liquidity layer for much of institutional crypto finance.
The narrowing DEX volume gap suggests both ecosystems are finding more sustainable equilibrium points after the extreme volatility earlier this year.
Volume Leadership Still Matters
Even though the numbers are now closer, DEX volume remains one of the most closely watched metrics in crypto because it reflects actual onchain economic activity rather than simple token speculation alone.
And honestly, the fact Solana managed to briefly process more than double Ethereum’s DEX volume at all earlier this year already changed how many traders view the competitive landscape between the two ecosystems.
Now the question is whether Ethereum keeps reclaiming share — or if Solana eventually reignites another wave of explosive retail trading activity later in the cycle.











