What The Solana Open Interest Is Saying About The Cryptocurrency Right Now

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Solana’s derivatives market is signaling something the price chart doesn’t fully show—and it matters right now.

According to data from Coinglass, Solana’s total open interest across all exchanges is currently at $5.44 billion, which is about 65.12 million SOL in outstanding futures contracts. That figure places open interest back within the same range it occupied in April 2025, effectively erasing nearly a full year of buildup in the asset

A Year’s Worth Of Leverage Is Gone

According to CoinGlass, Solana’s open interest is currently around $5.45 billion, a level that stands far below the peaks seen during the late-2025 run-up. 

From late April 2025, Solana’s open interest continued to climb, scaling from the $5 billion to $6 billion range through the summer months, breaking past $12 billion by mid-July, and ultimately peaking around $15 billion to $16 billion in mid-September 2025 when the SOL price was trading above $240.

However, what followed that peak was an unwinding that has lasted for the past few months. Solana’s open interest fell through October and November 2025, briefly stabilized in December, then finally collapsed in January and early February 2026. At the time of writing, Solana’s open interest has now dropped to $5.44 billion, which appears to be the lowest point since early April 2025.

That is important because it shows the Solana price ecosystem has unwound nearly a full year of speculative buildup. Many of the traders who were previously amplifying Solana’s moves through leverage are no longer as active.

Solana Open Interest. Source: Coinglass

What This Means For SOL Price

The distribution of that $5.44 billion across trading exchanges shows that Binance holds the largest share at $951.84 million, which is about 17.49% of total open interest. This is followed by CME at $672.55 million and Bybit at $617.30 million. KuCoin stands out in the short-term data, recording the largest 24-hour OI change among major venues at +10.42%, though it originates from one of the smaller books in the table at $402.69 million. 

SOLUSD now trading at $82.73. Chart: TradingView

The CME open interest number is notable to watch, as it means that institutional participation via regulated futures is still holding up compared to other exchanges. 

Total Solana Open Interest. Source: Coinglass

There is an important relationship between price and open interest. Whenever an asset’s price rises alongside open interest, it means new money is entering and momentum is being reinforced. On the other hand, when price falls and open interest also falls, it usually points to a reset, where positions are being closed and leverage is being removed from the system.

This can be read in two ways. The bearish reading is that fewer leveraged traders means less immediate buying pressure and less momentum support, which can leave price vulnerable if spot demand does not step in. The more constructive reading is that a large part of the excess leverage has already been washed out.

At the time of writing, Solana is trading at $83.51, down by 2.7% in the past 24 hours.

Featured image from Unsplash, chart from TradingView

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