Solana (CRYPTO: SOL) is currently trading near $87 after a rough start to 2026, where it recorded a 33% decline in Q1. However, according to the Solana Foundation, SOL led the market in real activity in the first quarter, handling 41% of all on-chain spot trading volume—which is more than Ethereum and all Layer-2 networks combined.
Right now, Solana is still about 70% below its January 2025 ATH of $294, which means investors who held SOL since then have lost about two-thirds of their gains.For those thinking long-term, the right question is how much 1 SOL could realistically be worth by 2030.
Why Solana Is Still Struggling Below $100 Despite Strong On-Chain Activity

Despite being a leader in on-chain activity, Solana has struggled to trade above $100. The crypto is now trading below its 50-day, 100-day, and 200-day moving averages, and all attempts at recovery have been met with sell-offs as holders who bought at higher levels take the chance to exit.
Institutions have been pulling money out of Solana ETFs too. According to SoSoValue, the total outflows from March 27 to April 10 crossed $15 million, suggesting that investors are approaching Solana’s market with caution. The only exception is this week, which has seen positive inflows currently sitting at $6.64 million. However, it could be just a short break in the negative trend rather than a change in momentum.
Adding to the bearish pressure, Solana’s futures open interest has significantly dropped since February. CoinGlass data shows that Solana’s open interest peaked around January 15 at $9.2 billion when SOL traded around $146. However, there has been a steady decline since February, and Solana’s open interest now sits around $5 billion—a level not seen since March 2025.
So while Solana is leading in on-chain usage, the price action, ETF outflows, and shrinking open interest all point to a market that hasn’t caught up to the network’s fundamentals yet. Until that changes, the SOL price is likely to keep struggling below $100.
How High or Low Could Solana Go by 2030?

Here’s how high or low the solana price could be by 2030.
Bullish Prediction
Our bullish projections start with the current macro conditions improving in the short-term. If geopolitical tensions ease and inflation numbers cool, the market sentiment would turn positive and move away from extreme fear. In such a scenario, SOL could reclaim $100 in Q2 and push toward $250 by Q4, with a possible retest of its $294 ATH in a strong rally.
By 2030, SOL could reach $2,000 as Standard Chartered predicted in early 2026, though the bank cut its 2026 target from $310 to $250 to reflect current headwinds. This scenario assumes that Solana becomes a leader in stablecoin payments and remains the go-to blockchain network for meme coins.
Solana ETFs would also need to see sustained inflows well beyond the $1 billion they’ve attracted so far—closer to the tens of billions that Bitcoin ETFs have pulled in. A more bullish forecast from VanEck, published in late 2023, forecasts Solana reaching $3,211 by 2030—a 3,600% increase from current levels. While possible, it would require Solana to become a clear market leader, which may take longer than the next 4 years.
Base Prediction
Our base forecast is that Solana will trade between $330 and $350 by 2030. However, to achieve this projection, Solana would have to maintain steady growth and trade above $100 for the rest of 2026.
SOL ETF inflows would need to remain slightly positive to show that investor confidence in Solana is rebuilding. The crypto would also need to maintain on-chain usage, which has seen a 66x increase over the last quarter, according to Artemis. VanEck also gave a conservative prediction that SOL could reach $335 by 2030, which is still nearly 300% upside from its price today.
Bearish Prediction
If market conditions worsen and sentiment remains in extreme fear, Solana could crumble under the bearish pressure. In this scenario, we see SOL breaking below the $80 support level. And if the current trend of monthly losses since October 2025 continues, a further fall towards $50 is not entirely ruled out.
By 2030, Solana may still be struggling to reclaim its $294 ATH if macro conditions don’t improve much. VanEck’s bearish forecast puts SOL at $9.81—an 88% drop from current levels over the next 4 years. The last time Solana experienced such a decline was in 2022, when the coin lost 94.2% of its value from $179.27 to $8.17, driven largely by the FTX collapse.
What Really Matters for Solana Now
For Solana to reach the bullish and conservative price targets, it needs to reclaim $100 and hold it through the rest of the year at least. If Solana can do that while maintaining its on-chain dominance and ETF inflows start turning positive consistently, the base forecast of $330-$350 by 2030 is well within reach. The bullish projection of $2,000 requires a lot more to go right, but it’s not impossible if stablecoin micropayments take off the way Standard Chartered expects.
Right now, all eyes are on macroeconomic conditions and the broader market sentiment. If both improve, the crypto market could go on a bull run, and Solana would benefit from that—especially if the micropayments forecast that Standard Chartered is betting on starts to play out over the next two to three years.