Solana recorded 755.3% year-over-year growth in total payment volume as of February 11, 2026, outpacing every other blockchain and traditional fintech in the comparison, according to Messari data sourced from Artemis.
The shared chart compares total payment volume growth rates across eight networks and companies. The contrast between traditional fintech and blockchain infrastructure is immediate. PayPal grew 6%, Fiserv 7.5%, and Block Inc 7.7%. Adyen, the most dynamic of the traditional players, reached 43.4%. All four sit in the single or low double-digit percentage range.
The blockchain networks occupy a different universe entirely. Tron grew 493.1%. Ethereum reached 625.2%. BNB Chain hit 648.3%. Solana led everything at 755.3%, roughly 18 percentage points above BNB Chain and 130 points above Ethereum.
The scale difference between traditional fintech and blockchain payment volume growth is not incremental. PayPal’s 6% sits 749 percentage points below Solana’s 755%. That gap reflects two different phases of infrastructure adoption, one mature and saturating, one early and accelerating.
Solana’s payment volume advantage over Ethereum and BNB Chain comes from its cost and throughput structure. As covered in the Aptos transaction cost article earlier this week, blockchain networks processing payments at fractions of a cent per transaction unlock use cases that are economically impossible on higher-fee networks. Solana’s fee structure sits in the same category, enabling micropayments, high-frequency settlement, and retail-scale transactions that Ethereum’s base layer cannot accommodate at comparable cost.
The 130 percentage point gap between Solana at 755.3% and Ethereum at 625.2% is meaningful in the context of the RWA and stablecoin data covered throughout this week. Solana overtook Ethereum in total RWA holders for the first time. Stripe reintroduced crypto payments starting with USDC on Solana. Grayscale published a bullish thesis on SOL trading 67% below its September 2025 highs. The payment volume growth data adds another dimension to the same narrative.
The inclusion of PayPal, Fiserv, Block, and Adyen in the same chart as blockchain networks is the most pointed element of the data. These are not struggling companies. PayPal processes hundreds of billions annually. Fiserv powers a significant portion of U.S. banking infrastructure. Their single-digit percentage growth rates reflect mature markets with high penetration.
Blockchain payment volume growing at 493% to 755% while traditional payment infrastructure grows at 6% to 43% describes a market share transfer in its early stages. Stanley Druckenmiller’s prediction that stablecoins will run global payments within 15 years, covered earlier today, looks less ambitious against this data. The growth differential being this wide this early suggests the transition is already underway, not approaching.
The post Solana’s Payment Volume Grew 755% Year-Over-Year – Faster Than Every Blockchain and Fintech on the Chart appeared first on ETHNews.

