Hyperliquid, the Layer-1 blockchain that built its reputation on lightning-fast perpetual futures, is moving into options territory. The platform announced that both Hyperliquid-native and Ethereum-native options are on the way.
What Hyperliquid is building
The upcoming options functionality will span two flavors. Hyperliquid-native options will likely be built directly on the platform’s HyperCore engine, the same system that powers its central limit order book for perpetuals and spot markets. Ethereum-native options, meanwhile, would tap into HyperEVM, the Ethereum-compatible execution environment that became more tightly integrated with HyperCore following a merger in March 2025.
This dual approach matters because it lets Hyperliquid serve two distinct audiences simultaneously. Traders who live on Hyperliquid natively get options without leaving the ecosystem. Ethereum-native users, meanwhile, get access through a familiar EVM interface, complete with ETH deposits and withdrawals that have been available for spot trading since the HyperCore/HyperEVM integration.
The platform already processes trades with block times around 0.2 seconds, which is roughly 75 times faster than Ethereum mainnet.
The HIP-4 foundation
This options push didn’t come out of nowhere. Hyperliquid has been laying the groundwork through HIP-4, a protocol upgrade that introduced something called “Outcomes.” These are fixed-range, collateralized contracts designed for prediction markets and options-like products, notably without leverage.
HIP-4 has been in testing on Hyperliquid’s testnet since February 2026, giving developers time to stress-test the mechanics before a mainnet debut.
Third-party protocols have already been experimenting in this space on Hyperliquid. Opt.fun, for instance, provides high-leverage options on the platform. And HYPE itself, the platform’s native token, already has options trading available through external venues like Derive.
The HYPE token and platform economics
The HYPE token, launched via airdrop in November 2024 with a total supply of 1 billion tokens, sits at the center of Hyperliquid’s economic model. It serves triple duty: governance, staking, and transaction fees on HyperEVM.
The token benefits from a fee-funded buyback mechanism, meaning a portion of platform trading fees gets used to purchase HYPE from the open market.
No specific launch date for ETH options has been announced.
What this means for traders and investors
The on-chain options market is still relatively underdeveloped compared to perpetual futures. Most serious options volume still happens on centralized exchanges like Deribit. Hyperliquid’s entry into this space could start pulling some of that activity on-chain, particularly from traders who already use the platform for perps.
The competitive landscape includes platforms like Lyra, Premia, and Aevo, which have been building on-chain options for years. Hyperliquid’s advantage is its existing user base, its speed, and the fact that it already runs one of the most active on-chain order books in crypto.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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