Solana’s rise in the developer world is starting to look a lot more serious than many people expected a few years ago.
Fresh industry data shows Solana now accounts for roughly 23% of global blockchain developer activity, a huge jump from just 6% back in 2020. At the same time, Ethereum’s share has continued to shrink, falling to around 31% — the first time it has dropped that low in years.
That doesn’t mean Ethereum is disappearing, far from it. But it does suggest the balance of attention among builders is changing in a way that would have sounded unlikely not too long ago.
For years, Ethereum was basically untouchable when it came to developer mindshare. If someone wanted to build in crypto, Ethereum was usually the default choice. Now, though, more developers are experimenting elsewhere, and Solana appears to be benefiting the most from that shift.
The numbers behind it are pretty striking.
According to recent reports, Solana has been growing across nearly every developer category. More new developers joined the ecosystem this year than Ethereum, hobbyist participation is especially strong, and even among full-time professional builders, Solana’s presence has expanded rapidly.
What makes this more interesting is that it’s not just a temporary hype cycle tied to token price action. The trend has been building steadily for a while.
A lot of it comes down to practicality. Developers tend to go where users and activity already are. Solana has become known for fast transactions and low fees, which makes certain applications — especially trading, payments, and consumer-facing DeFi products — easier to build and scale.
That matters because real-world usage changes the equation. If users are actively transacting on a chain, developers naturally follow.
Meanwhile, Ethereum’s ecosystem has become more fragmented over time because of its Layer 2 expansion strategy. Networks like Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism still rely on Ethereum, but from a builder perspective, the experience is no longer concentrated in one place. Liquidity, tooling, and users are spread across multiple environments.
Solana, on the other hand, still operates more like a single unified ecosystem. Supporters argue that simplicity is becoming a competitive advantage.
Another interesting detail is how distributed Solana’s developer activity appears to be. Reports suggest the ecosystem relies less heavily on a tiny group of elite contributors compared to Ethereum. There’s also strong participation from smaller independent developers building tools, DeFi products, trading infrastructure, and user-focused applications.
That grassroots activity is important because it often creates the ecosystem effects that larger institutions eventually follow.
And institutions do seem to be paying closer attention now. According to several builders in the space, infrastructure around custody, payments, and institutional access is growing much faster on Solana than many expected.
None of this automatically means Solana will “replace” Ethereum. Ethereum still dominates huge parts of crypto infrastructure, stablecoins, and institutional trust. But the developer race no longer looks one-sided.
A few years ago, the idea of Solana seriously challenging Ethereum’s dominance in builder activity sounded unrealistic to many people. Today, it looks much more like a real competition.



