DeFi’s stronghold on Ethereum has suffered an identifiable blow over the first few months of 2026. The blockchain’s market share in terms of TVL was down to 54% from 63.5% in January to May 7th.
Though it is leading in TVL with $45.4 billion, other blockchains are gradually eating into its market share in niche markets.

Each competing chain has built its position around a distinct function rather than challenging Ethereum broadly.
Ethereum’s slipping share reflects a DeFi market that has reorganized around specialization. Solana holds 6.66% of DeFi TVL, BNB Chain 6.60%, Bitcoin 6.35%, Tron 6.17%, Base 5.44%, and Hyperliquid 1.81%.
No single chain has displaced Ethereum, but together they have absorbed a meaningful portion of the market it once held more firmly.
BNB Smart Chain built its ground through Binance-linked distribution. PancakeSwap volume climbed 539.2% quarter-over-quarter to $392.6 billion in Q2 2025, accounting for 45% of top-10 DEX volume.
BSC currently records $5.55 billion in TVL and $739.6 million in 24-hour DEX volume. Binance deepened this further through Alpha Earn and Alpha 2.0, which route DEX trading directly through its own interfaces.
Tron has taken a narrower but powerful route, operating as a stablecoin settlement rail. DefiLlama data shows $89.6 billion in stablecoins on Tron, with USDT making up 97.86% of that total.
Its DeFi TVL sits at $5.19 billion, while 24-hour DEX volume remains thin at $55.5 million. Tron handles enormous dollar throughput with limited application diversity beyond that core function.
Hyperliquid has emerged as a self-sufficient perpetuals venue. DefiLlama shows $9.37 billion in 24-hour perpetuals volume, $42.4 billion over seven days, and $8.94 billion in open interest.
Its TVL of $1.52 billion alone does not capture its actual market weight. The volume and open interest figures confirm that perpetuals trading has grown large enough to form its own DeFi liquidity center.
Ethereum’s absolute position remains strong despite the share compression. DefiLlama shows $165.5 billion in stablecoins on Ethereum, alongside $1.45 billion in 24-hour DEX volume and $1.61 billion in 24-hour perps volume.
It hosts the blue-chip lending protocols and institutional integrations that most DeFi infrastructure relies on. These figures keep it firmly positioned as DeFi’s primary balance sheet.
Base adds an important layer to this picture. Built by Coinbase on the OP Stack, Base holds $4.58 billion in TVL and records $854.97 million in 24-hour DEX volume.
Activity moving from Ethereum L1 to Base still settles within the Ethereum security model. So while Base’s growth reduces Ethereum’s headline share, it does not remove that value from the broader Ethereum stack.
Over the past 30 days, Ethereum’s TVL grew 13.9%, with Bitcoin at 13.4%, Base at 10.5%, and Hyperliquid at 7.3%.
The DeFi market is expanding across multiple chains at once. Share redistribution reflects that expansion rather than a direct capital exit from Ethereum.
Two paths sit ahead for Ethereum’s share by end-2026. If stablecoin and lending activity grows faster and Base’s performance reads as Ethereum stack strength, dominance could recover toward 55%–58%.
If Binance, Coinbase, BTCFi, and Hyperliquid continue gaining ground, Ethereum’s share may compress further to 46%–50% instead.
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