Solana network activity collapsed by 97% from its peak in November 2024, with retail investors continuing to buy while institutional wallets exited. This cryptocurrency reached an all-time high of $296 in November 2024 but has since fallen nearly 58%, with on-chain data revealing a clear divergence between wallet sizes and trading behaviors. What happened: Institutional exit Crypto trader Ardi revealed that since Solana peaked in November, buying pressure has mainly come from retail-sized wallets, with purchase amounts ranging between $0 and $1,000. Distribution began before the all-time high, and selling accelerated in the months leading up to October 10, 2024, indicating that major participants had planned to exit before the decline. Mid-sized wallets handle between $0 and $100,000, while institutional wallets managing $100,000 to $10 million have been steadily declining for about 13 months. Retail wallets showed continuous growth during the same period, suggesting small investors still believe SOL is undervalued despite institutional withdrawals. On-chain data reveals an almost perfect correlation between Solana demand and memecoin activity on the network. Read also: Dogecoin Surge After Election: Why $1 Theories Are Wrong Why this matters: Revenue collapse Investor and trader Jas reported that active monthly traders on Solana dropped from about 30 million in 2025 to less than 1 million, representing a 97% decline in network activity. Network revenue fell fivefold year-over-year, from $2.5 billion in 2024 to $500 million in 2025. Ethereum generated $1.4 billion in revenue this year, surpassing Solana by 56% year-to-date. "The future of SOL may no longer rely on memes but more on their subsequent performance," Jas said. Read next: Is Bitcoin's rebound running out of steam? Analysts point to Ethereum's supply risks
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#SolanaRevenueTopsEthereum Solana lost 97% of traders in 2025 due to institutional fund withdrawals
Solana network activity collapsed by 97% from its peak in November 2024, with retail investors continuing to buy while institutional wallets exited. This cryptocurrency reached an all-time high of $296 in November 2024 but has since fallen nearly 58%, with on-chain data revealing a clear divergence between wallet sizes and trading behaviors.
What happened: Institutional exit
Crypto trader Ardi revealed that since Solana peaked in November, buying pressure has mainly come from retail-sized wallets, with purchase amounts ranging between $0 and $1,000.
Distribution began before the all-time high, and selling accelerated in the months leading up to October 10, 2024, indicating that major participants had planned to exit before the decline.
Mid-sized wallets handle between $0 and $100,000, while institutional wallets managing $100,000 to $10 million have been steadily declining for about 13 months. Retail wallets showed continuous growth during the same period, suggesting small investors still believe SOL is undervalued despite institutional withdrawals.
On-chain data reveals an almost perfect correlation between Solana demand and memecoin activity on the network.
Read also: Dogecoin Surge After Election: Why $1 Theories Are Wrong
Why this matters: Revenue collapse
Investor and trader Jas reported that active monthly traders on Solana dropped from about 30 million in 2025 to less than 1 million, representing a 97% decline in network activity.
Network revenue fell fivefold year-over-year, from $2.5 billion in 2024 to $500 million in 2025.
Ethereum generated $1.4 billion in revenue this year, surpassing Solana by 56% year-to-date. "The future of SOL may no longer rely on memes but more on their subsequent performance," Jas said.
Read next: Is Bitcoin's rebound running out of steam? Analysts point to Ethereum's supply risks