Solana heads into 2026 facing the question of whether infrastructure upgrades and tokenized financial activity can push the network beyond its memecoin reputation.
Solana kicked off 2025 at the height of the memecoin frenzy, with Solana (SOL) reaching a new all-time high of $293 on Jan. 19. As memecoin volumes cooled over the year, SOL had fallen to around $130 by mid-December.
“Solana needs to shake off the stamp of ‘memecoin [or] NFT’ chain and position itself as a serious place for Web2 and Web3 financial businesses to come and build the future of finance,” Tomas Fanta, principal at the crypto investment firm Heartcore, told Cointelegraph.
Whether Solana can move beyond that reputation will depend largely on the success of its infrastructure upgrades. Next year, Solana is expected to advance its Firedancer validator client adoption, which proposes consensus changes and execution-layer improvements that aim to make the network more predictable and resilient.
Solana’s Firedancer is already live
The layer-1 blockchain’s infrastructure push is already moving ahead. The Firedancer validator client is now running on mainnet.
Firedancer, developed by Jump Crypto, is a reimplementation of Solana’s validator software designed to improve performance. The client is capable of processing up to around 1 million transactions per second (TPS) under ideal conditions.
The Solana Foundation said on Dec. 12 that Firedancer has been producing blocks on mainnet for more than 100 days outside of test environments.
Two validators are currently running the full Firedancer client, but a hybrid version known as “Frankendancer” has seen far broader adoption. Data shows roughly 165 validators, representing about 26% of the total stake, are now running Frankendancer alongside the existing Agave client.
Doug Colkitt, a founding contributor to Fogo, a layer-1 blockchain currently running Frankendancer, told Cointelegraph that the bigger test will come as more stake shifts onto pure Firedancer because stability at a tiny share of the network does not guarantee stability at scale.
“A lot of times, a client can be stable when you test it as a small percent of the network, and then certain things might not really emerge until you scale up to a larger percent of the network.”
For builders working on latency-sensitive financial products, those changes to performance already matter.
“For products like ours, where milliseconds matter, I expect the Firedancer upgrade to make trading even faster,” said Igor Stadnyk, co-founder and AI lead at True Trading — a Solana-based AI trading platform.
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More important than raw performance is whether that performance can be relied on consistently, Stadnyk said.
“Firedancer matters for a reason that doesn’t get enough attention: predictability. Throughput and latency improvements are great, but more importantly, Solana gets a fully independent client with a different codebase, engineering culture and failure modes.”
Alongside Firedancer, Solana developers are also preparing for Alpenglow, a proposed overhaul of Solana’s consensus design. The upgrade would replace proof-of-history and TowerBFT to cut block finality to roughly 150 milliseconds while improving the network’s ability to stay live even if a portion of validators are unresponsive.
“If successfully implemented, this new consensus mechanism will unlock Solana for the next level of performance,” Fanta said.
Memecoins don’t have to be Solana’s unintended burden
Memecoins have been one of Solana’s top growth engines, driving user activity and cultural relevance in the last couple of years. That activity helped pull developers and traders onto the network and played a major role in Solana’s decentralized finance resurgence.
At the same time, the dominance of memecoin trading has shaped how the network is perceived by investors and financial institutions, often tying Solana’s growth to speculative cycles.
“Memecoins won’t disappear. They’re part of Solana’s cultural identity and a liquidity engine that brings users in,” said Stadnyk.
He added that the next phase of growth is likely to come from applications that rely less on viral speculation and more on consistent execution, such as onchain perpetual futures and AI-native trading agents.
Memecoin trading has also reshaped how liquidity is provided on Solana. Over the past year, the network has seen the rise of prop automated market makers (AMMs), where trading firms deploy their own capital and algorithms onchain rather than relying on permissionless liquidity pools.
“In 2025, prop AMMs probably changed everything. Solana has always been a very trading-focused chain, and prop AMMs really revolutionized the market structure there — at least in spot trading.”
Colkitt said the model came with trade-offs, particularly around centralization, but argued that it emerged as a direct response to demand.
“If you didn’t have the memecoin explosion, you wouldn’t have had the explosion of activity in Solana,” he said. “You wouldn’t have built out the market structure or the infrastructure without that volume of transactions.”
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That same trading intensity has also shaped how Solana generates revenue. As the network matures, the challenge is reducing memecoins’ influence on revenue and sentiment without undermining the activity that drove its recent growth.
Fanta pointed to the importance of growing real economic value (REV) in ways that are less dependent on memecoin-induced maximal extractable value (MEV). MEV is a form of revenue generated by transaction ordering, and it can dominate network revenue during periods of intense speculative trading.
“If Solana can continue to grow its REV in a more sustainable, less memecoin-induced MEV way, institutional investors will take notice and reevaluate SOL’s value proposition under a very different risk framework,” Fanta said.
Fanta added that failing to attract more serious financial and corporate builders, particularly as many Web2 firms continue to experiment on EVM-based networks, could limit how far that reevaluation goes as Solana moves into 2026.
Solana’s bull and bear case
As Solana heads into 2026, the network’s outlook increasingly comes down to execution. The bull case, as Fanta said, rests on infrastructure upgrades delivering as intended and new forms of financial activity gaining real traction.
Successful rollouts of Firedancer and proposed consensus changes, combined with growth in tokenized funds, equities and other real-world assets, could help Solana generate more sustainable REV and shift how institutional investors assess its risk profile.
Colkitt said derivatives trading in 2025 has been a missed opportunity, with the network failing to produce a credible onchain rival to Hyperliquid during the last cycle. The absence of such a platform reflects Solana’s broader challenge as it looks to move beyond memecoins toward higher-stakes financial markets.
The downside risks for Solana are that deep protocol changes increase the danger of chain halts, an outcome that would quickly revive criticism tied to Solana’s earlier outages and weigh on sentiment.
Fanta argued that failure to attract larger Web2 and financial firms, many of which continue to experiment on Ethereum Virtual Machine-based networks, could cap Solana’s growth even if its performance advantages persist.
For builders like Stadnyk, the outcome hinges on whether Solana can turn its technical advantages into something dependable.
“Solana is the first environment where that vision is actually executable: low latency, predictable finality, cheap state reads and tooling that no longer feels experimental,” he said, referring to real-time, automated trading systems.
Stadnyk said 2026 could be the year Solana demonstrates that full-stack onchain trading can operate at a level previously reserved for centralized exchanges.
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