The Solana blockchain reached a significant milestone in February, processing a record-breaking $650 billion in stablecoin transaction volume. According to a research note from Grayscale, this figure more than doubles the network’s previous monthly record set in October, signaling a rapid maturation of on-chain retail payments.
Data cited by Grayscale’s head of research, Zach Pandl, indicates that Solana outperformed all other blockchains in stablecoin transaction volume for the month. Analysts suggest that Solana is uniquely positioned to capture a growing share of the retail payment market as stablecoins — digital assets typically pegged to the U.S. dollar –continue to emerge as a primary driver of global blockchain adoption.
This surge reflects a broader shift in the network’s ecosystem. While Solana was previously dominated by speculative memecoin trading, recent reports from Standard Chartered suggest activity is migrating toward SOL-stablecoin pairs. This transition highlights a growing demand for functional payment infrastructure over high-risk trading flows, bolstered by the network’s low transaction costs which facilitate micropayments and internet-native financial apps.
Despite the record volume, Solana currently holds the fourth-largest share of total stablecoin supply across all blockchains. It ranks second only to Ethereum in the circulation of USDC, the regulated stablecoin issued by Circle. While Ethereum remains the dominant force for institutional real-world assets and total value locked, Solana’s lead in user metrics and transaction fees suggests it is becoming the preferred layer for high-frequency retail use.
Industry experts anticipate that the full transition from speculative “degen” activity to a stable, payment-oriented economy will take time. However, the February data serves as a proof of concept for Solana’s scalability, reinforcing the view that stablecoins will be the central pillar of the network’s long-term maturity and utility.
