Hyperliquid has cemented its position as crypto’s most aggressive token buyer, recording a single buyback of $283 million, the largest in the industry since the start of 2026. The decentralized perpetual exchange has now crossed $1.1 billion in cumulative buybacks.
The protocol isn’t doing this out of generosity. It’s a mechanical system: 97-99% of Hyperliquid’s trading fees flow directly into open-market purchases of HYPE tokens, which are then burned.
The buyback machine in numbers
The Assistance Fund, approved by validators in December 2025, operates as a continuous demand engine for HYPE tokens.
From January to October 2025 alone, the protocol spent $645 million on buybacks. Quarterly figures tell the acceleration story: $316.76 million in Q3 2025, $255.05 million in Q4 2025, and $192.25 million in Q1 2026. Monthly averages have ranged between $65 million and $85 million during earlier periods.
Over 44 million HYPE tokens have been acquired through the program so far. That represents roughly 4.4% of the total supply permanently removed from circulation.
Hyperliquid has generated over $1.16 billion cumulatively, with nearly the entire sum directed toward HYPE token acquisitions.
Eight projects join the buyback trend
Eight crypto projects have now conducted buybacks that outstrip their supply growth since January 2026. That $283 million single buyback exceeds what many protocols generate in total revenue across an entire year.
What this means for investors
Because buybacks are tied to trading fees rather than discretionary decisions by a core team, investors can model future demand based on trading volume. If the platform generates fees, HYPE gets bought and burned.
With 4.4% of total supply already removed and the program showing no signs of slowing, HYPE’s circulating supply is shrinking at a meaningful pace. For context, Bitcoin’s supply growth from mining is roughly 0.8% annually.
The model’s health depends entirely on Hyperliquid maintaining its trading volume dominance. Any sustained decline in perpetual trading activity would directly reduce the buyback rate.
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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