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Just caught this interesting breakdown from CoinGecko about which crypto protocols actually made the most money last year. Turns out the top tether and stablecoin platforms absolutely dominated the revenue game in 2025, which honestly makes sense when you think about transaction volumes.
Tether was crushing it with like $5.2 billion in revenue—basically 42% of all the money generated across 168 different protocols. Pretty wild when you realize how much of the ecosystem depends on USDT for trading and moving value around. TRON came in second with $3.5 billion, mostly because everyone's using it for stablecoin transactions. These two alone show you where the real economic activity is happening.
Circle's USDC hit third place with $1.68 billion, and their stablecoin supply actually grew 108% through the year. Then you've got Hyperliquid at $1.1 billion from their derivatives platform, and Pump.fun rounded out the top five with $526 million. The interesting part? Stablecoin issuers as a group pulled in about 65% of total protocol revenue—way more than any other category.
When you look at the top tether and other leaders, it's pretty clear the real money in crypto right now isn't in hype coins or new narratives. It's in the infrastructure that actually gets used for payments and trading. Makes you think about where the actual utility is versus where the attention usually goes.