Stablecoins are rapidly evolving to become the primary liquidity rails of the crypto economy, as traders seek stability in volatile markets. As capital flows between assets, participants increasingly rely on dollar-pegged tokens to settle transactions and move funds between chains.
Ethereum (ETH) currently anchors this infrastructure with approximately $161.4 billion in stablecoin supply, largely supported by Tether (USDT)’s dominance of nearly 48.6%. TRON follows with approximately $86.7 billion, where USDT controls over 98% of the ecosystem, reinforcing its role as a major liquidity corridor.
Source: DeFiLlama
Further down the stack, BNB Chain (BNB) holds around $16.6 billion, while Solana (SOL) holds around $15.8 billion, reflecting the growing multi-chain distribution of stablecoin. At the same time, emerging networks such as Base hold $4.8 billion, while hyperliquid networks (HYPE) account for around $4.6 billion – evidence of growing participation as new settlement layers.
This expansion signals intensifying competition between blockchains. As stablecoin liquidity deepens across ecosystems, chains increasingly compete not only for supply, but also for transaction speed, trading activity, and settlement dominance.
BNB Chain emerges as the transactional platform for stable coins
At the time of writing, stablecoin activity on blockchains revealed a striking imbalance between supply and usage. BNB Chain has processed nearly 40% of global stablecoin transactions. And yet it only held about 5% of the total stablecoin supply. This disparity illustrates unusually high transaction speed on the network.
Most recently, BNB Chain recorded $21.7 billion in stablecoin transfers in a single day. This is the highest level in the past year.

Source: Artemis
Meanwhile, chains such as Ethereum and TRON hold much larger supply shares. And yet, their share of transactions has remained relatively low. Rather, stablecoins on BNB Chain circulate quickly rather than sitting idle in wallets or liquidity pools.

Source:
This dynamic becomes clearer thanks to participation measures. BNB Chain now hosts approximately 25% of active stablecoin wallets worldwide, reflecting high user engagement in trading and payments.
Together, these conditions position BNB Chain as a high-throughput transactional layer. Meanwhile, other networks increasingly function as stablecoin storage or liquidity reserves within the broader crypto settlement infrastructure.
BNB Chain’s Low Fees Drive Usage
Stablecoin activity is increasingly focused on the BNB chain, supported by structural advantages that enable rapid transaction flows. Transaction costs have also remained very low, with $2.11 million in weekly fees costing around $0.02 per transfer. The Fermi upgrade in January improved this efficiency by reducing block times to 0.45 seconds.
At the same time, network capacity remained strong. Daily activity averages around 15 million transactions. This throughput allows stablecoin transfers, particularly USDT payments, to occur without congestion.
Meanwhile, DeFi liquidity is boosting usage. For example, PancakeSwap (CAKE) had $2.01 billion in TVL, while Venus managed $1.52 billion, both heavily reliant on stablecoin activity.
Final summary
-
BNB Chain (BNB) processes almost 40% of global stablecoin transactions, although it only holds around 5% of the supply.
-
BNB’s structural advantages, such as low fees, fast block times, and significant DeFi liquidity, continue to attract stablecoin flows as blockchains vie for settlement dominance.


