Solana’s weekly DEX volume reached $11.49 billion in April 2026, surpassing Ethereum’s $7.62 billion. Ethereum still has $45.5 billion in DeFi TVL, roughly six times Solana’s $7.6 billion.
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Solana’s Alpenglow upgrade is in validation testing with a finality target of 150 milliseconds, while XRP has the CLARITY Act moving toward a full Senate vote.
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Solana (CRYPTO: SOL) now processes more weekly DEX volume than Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH). XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) clears cross-border transactions in less than five seconds, while banks need one to three days for the same settlement. Both networks have followers who believe that it will be theirs that makes Ethereum irrelevant.
Ethereum still dominates the institutional capital pool, and neither Solana nor XRP have seriously threatened that position yet. Understanding which one is really catching up requires looking at where Ethereum is still leading and where each competitor is actually winning.
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What Ethereum still controls
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Ethereum has $45.5 billion in DeFi TVL, representing about 53% of the global DeFi market as of May 2026. The network has 31,869 active developers compared to Solana’s 17,708, and US Treasury tokenized products on Ethereum hit a record $8 billion in May 2026, doubling in six months. Institutions like JPMorgan, BlackRock, and Franklin Templeton are actively building tokenization products on top of Ethereum infrastructure.
The Glamsterdam upgrade targeting Q3 2026 aims to significantly increase performance and further reduce base layer fees, which would eliminate the loudest remaining complaints about using Ethereum at scale. That’s the infrastructure Solana and XRP are trying to displace, and neither has done so yet.
What Solana has actually built against Ethereum
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Solana’s weekly DEX volume reached $11.49 billion in April 2026, surpassing Ethereum’s $7.62 billion at the base layer. Solana’s daily active addresses run more than six times those of Ethereum, and the cost difference is dramatic: Solana charges around $0.00025 per transaction, while Ethereum charges between $0.50 and $3.00 for a single transaction.
In December 2025, Jump Crypto’s Firedancer client launched on the Solana mainnet after three years of development, with the long-term goal of 1 million transactions per second. Current production throughput on Solana is in the range of 3000 to 5000 TPS, compared to the Ethereum mainnet’s 15 to 30 TPS.
The Alpenglow update, currently in validation testing after entering a community test group on May 11, would reduce transaction finality from 12.8 seconds to between 100 and 150 milliseconds. Solana co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko said at Consensus Miami 2026 that Alpenglow could hit the mainnet as early as the third quarter of 2026 if testing goes smoothly.
Sub-150 millisecond finalization would make Solana faster than almost all existing payment infrastructure, creating a gateway to real-time order books and tokenized financial products that settle as fast as they are traded. The risk is that Solana’s network revenue has fallen sharply since the meme coin boom ended, and the price needs new sources of sustained on-chain demand before developer numbers are fully translated into token performance.
Where XRP is making its move
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The XRP Ledger surpassed $3 billion in real-world tokenized assets at the end of April, an increase of 59% in just 30 days. On May 6, JPMorgan’s Kinexys platform, Mastercard, Ripple, and Ondo Finance settled the first cross-border tokenized Treasury settlement between banks on the network, in less than five seconds outside of normal banking hours.
On May 14, the Senate Banking Committee approved the CLARITY Act in a bipartisan 15-9 vote, sending the bill to the full Senate, where it still needs 60 votes to advance before being signed by President Trump. A permanent classification of commodities under federal law eliminates legal uncertainty that has kept larger institutional groups cautious.
However, in JPMorgan’s Treasury pilot, the deal was done through RLUSD, Ripple’s dollar stablecoin, while XRP only covered minimal network fees of around $0.0002 per transaction. Banks rely on the ledger without necessarily demanding the token, and the disconnect between ledger activity and actual demand for the token is the argument that XRP has yet to answer.
What is the real killer of Ethereum?
Nor is it an Ethereum killer in the traditional sense. Solana is winning the high-throughput consumer activity race, taking on DEX volume and daily active users in ways that the Ethereum mainnet can’t match on cost alone. XRP is winning the race for institutional arrangements, securing banking partnerships and legislative progress. Ethereum is still winning the development infrastructure and deep liquidity race by a margin that none of its rivals have seriously threatened yet.
For investors, the most useful question is which benefits most from what is already in place. Solana has Alpenglow moving toward mainnet launch in Q3 and a growing developer base. XRP has the CLARITY Act and institutional partnerships that continue to come even as the token price remains stable. Both are trading well below their 2025 highs.
Which will reach Ethereum first depends on whether the Solana upgrade cycle drives sustained new demand or whether XRP’s legislative catalyst ultimately converts ledger activity into token demand.
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