The rivalry between crypto’s two unlikely revenue juggernauts just got another chapter. Pump.fun, the Solana-based memecoin launchpad, has reclaimed its position above Polymarket in 24-hour protocol revenue after the prediction market platform briefly seized the lead.
The revenue flip, and the flip back
On May 31, Polymarket pulled ahead of Pump.fun in daily revenue for the first time in a notable stretch. Polymarket generated $999K in 24-hour protocol revenue that day, compared to Pump.fun’s $848K, according to DefiLlama data.
That gap, roughly $151K, was enough to turn heads. But Pump.fun has since reclaimed its lead in the daily revenue rankings, reasserting the dominance it has held for much of the past year.
Pump.fun earns revenue through bonding-curve trade fees and graduation fees, the costs users pay when launching and trading memecoins. Polymarket pulls in revenue from trading fees on its prediction markets, where users bet on everything from election outcomes to interest rate decisions.
Pump.fun’s revenue slowdown is real
Pump.fun’s Q2 2026 revenue pace is down approximately 36% from the prior quarter. That’s a significant deceleration for a platform that crossed $100 million in cumulative revenue by late 2024 and has likely generated hundreds of millions in total fees by now.
Earlier in April 2026, Pump.fun still held a clear edge over Polymarket in 7-day revenue metrics. But the gap has been narrowing, and Polymarket’s brief daily overtake on May 31 was a signal that the prediction market platform is gaining ground.
Polymarket’s momentum is partly structural. The platform rolled out new fee structures that have boosted its revenue capture from trading activity. Combined with increased user engagement around major global events, those fee changes have turned Polymarket into a more efficient revenue machine.
What this means for investors
For investors evaluating the Solana ecosystem, Pump.fun’s 36% quarterly revenue decline is worth watching closely. Pump.fun has been one of the largest single sources of fee revenue on Solana, and a sustained downturn would ripple through the chain’s economic activity metrics.
The broader takeaway is that fee-generating protocols are increasingly the metric that matters. Total Value Locked, or TVL, dominated the conversation in previous cycles. Now revenue is the benchmark, and for good reason: it measures actual demand for a product rather than just capital sitting in a smart contract.
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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