Hyperliquid Is Now Crypto’s Most Liquid Platform, CEO Claims — How True Is It?
Prashant Jha
Tue, January 27, 2026 at 5:44 AM EST
4 min read
In this article:
Key Takeaways
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Hyperliquid now controls more than 70% of decentralized perpetuals liquidity and shows tighter BTC spreads than Binance on-chain.
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CEO Jeff Yan’s “most liquid” claim holds up for on-chain perps and hybrid TradFi markets, but not for centralized exchange scale overall.
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After explosive 2025 growth, Hyperliquid now commands over $8 billion in open interest and has become the dominant perp DEX.
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For years, centralized exchanges defined crypto price discovery. That balance is starting to shift.
Hyperliquid, a self-funded on-chain perpetuals exchange, has grown fast enough to challenge one of the industry’s longest-held assumptions: that real liquidity can only live on centralized platforms like Binance.
When Hyperliquid founder Jeff Yan claimed the protocol is now the “most liquid venue for crypto price discovery,” the statement raised eyebrows across the market.
The question isn’t whether Hyperliquid has grown. It’s whether the claim actually holds up.
Hyperliquid’s Liquidity Claim Under the Microscope
Yan’s argument centers on Bitcoin perpetual futures, where tight spreads and deep order books matter more than raw volume.
On those metrics, Hyperliquid is starting to look competitive—even against Binance.
Data shared by Yan shows Bitcoin perpetual spreads on Hyperliquid hovering around $1, compared with roughly $5.50 on Binance.
Order book depth also appears stronger on-chain, with approximately 140 BTC in cumulative ask liquidity versus Binance’s estimated 80 BTC at comparable levels.
That combination suggests less slippage and more resilient execution for traders operating on Hyperliquid’s BTC perp market.
Crucially, all of this liquidity is fully visible and verifiable on-chain.
Unlike centralized exchanges, Hyperliquid’s order book and execution data can be independently audited in real time.
Yan also pointed to Hyperliquid’s expansion beyond crypto-native assets.
Through its HIP-3 framework, the platform now supports permissionless perpetual markets tied to traditional assets like commodities.
Those markets have grown quickly, with open interest recently approaching $790 million, driven largely by rising gold and silver trading.
Taken together, Hyperliquid has clearly become the most liquid venue within decentralized perpetuals—and increasingly relevant for hybrid crypto–TradFi price discovery.
How Hyperliquid Got Here So Fast
Hyperliquid’s rise has been unusually rapid, especially for a decentralized exchange.
Launched in 2023 and built without venture capital funding, the protocol operates its own Layer-1 blockchain optimized for perpetual futures.
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Its HyperBFT consensus enables sub-second execution, while zero-fee spot trading and a fully on-chain order book attracted early power users.
Before its token launch in November 2024, Hyperliquid had already processed roughly $460 billion in cumulative trading volume.
Since then, activity has accelerated sharply. Total volume has climbed to around $2.6 trillion, open interest has grown past $8 billion, and total value locked has more than tripled year over year.
By early 2026, Hyperliquid accounted for roughly 70% of decentralized perpetuals open interest, far ahead of rivals like Aster and Lighter.
Monthly perp volumes now sit near $166 billion, and active users have surged to about 1.4 million—up more than 350% from 2024.
That dominance has held even after periods of volatility.
While Hyperliquid briefly lost ground following the October 2025 market crash and increased competition, its open interest proved “sticky,” and market share rebounded quickly.
Where Binance Still Wins
Despite Hyperliquid’s progress, the comparison has limits.
Binance remains the largest perpetuals venue by a wide margin when measured by total scale.
Its combined perpetual open interest across all assets is estimated at above $50 billion, compared with Hyperliquid’s $8 billion.
Daily trading volumes on Binance still exceed $100 billion, far outpacing Hyperliquid’s $5–7 billion.
Institutional flows also continue to favor centralized exchanges, where custody, fiat rails, and compliance infrastructure remain easier to navigate.
That said, Hyperliquid’s liquidity has one advantage Binance cannot replicate: transparency.
Its on-chain execution removes the risk of opaque order books, hidden leverage, or sudden outages—concerns that have repeatedly surfaced around centralized platforms.
Within decentralized markets, Hyperliquid no longer competes for leadership. It sets the benchmark.
What This Means for Crypto Price Discovery
Jeff Yan’s claim depends on how “most liquid” is defined.
Hyperliquid does not surpass Binance in absolute volume or institutional reach.
But for on-chain perpetuals—and increasingly for hybrid crypto and traditional asset markets—it now offers tighter spreads, deeper visible liquidity, and faster execution than any other decentralized venue.
That shift matters. It signals that decentralized infrastructure can host serious price discovery without sacrificing performance.
In 2025 alone, Hyperliquid generated roughly $600 million in protocol revenue, with the vast majority routed toward HYPE token buybacks and burns.
The token now trades around $25–27, with a market capitalization above $6.9 billion.
The bigger takeaway is structural. Hyperliquid’s rise shows that decentralized exchanges are no longer just alternatives—they are becoming primary venues in their own right.
Binance still dominates crypto’s centralized layer. But on-chain, Hyperliquid is already there.
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