Hyperliquid processed around $330 billion in trading volume in July 2025, briefly surpassing Robinhood.
Key takeaways:
Hyperliquid processed around $330 billion in trading volume in July 2025, briefly surpassing Robinhood.
A split-chain design enabled CEX-like speed while keeping custody and execution onchain.
The HLP vault and Assistance Fund buybacks aligned traders, market makers and token holders in a reinforcing loop.
A large airdrop, Phantom Wallet integration and self-funded operations helped attract users and sustain adoption.
A year after launching its own layer 1 (L1), Hyperliquid has become one of decentralized finance’s (DeFi) top perpetuals venues, logging about $319 billion in trading volume in July 2025. Remarkably, the core team behind it is believed to consist of only 11 people.
This guide looks at the technical design and operational choices that enabled such scale.
What is Hyperliquid?
Hyperliquid is a decentralized perpetuals exchange built on a custom layer 1.
Its chain is divided into two tightly connected components: HyperCore, which manages the onchain order book, margining, liquidations and clearing; and HyperEVM, a general-purpose smart contract layer that interacts directly with exchange state.
Both are secured by HyperBFT, a HotStuff-style proof-of-stake (PoS) consensus that enforces a single transaction order without relying on offchain systems. HyperEVM launched on mainnet on Feb. 18, 2025, adding programmability around the exchange core.
Did you know? Hyperliquid achieves a median trade latency of just 0.2 seconds (with even 99th‑percentile delays under 0.9 seconds) and can handle up to 200,000 transactions per second, rivaling centralized exchanges on speed.
The $330-billion month: What the data shows
July was Hyperliquid’s strongest month yet. Data from DefiLlama shows the platform processed about $319 billion in perpetuals trading volume. That pushed DeFi-wide perpetuals to a record $487 billion — a 34% jump from June.
At the same time, industry trackers highlighted a combined $330.8 billion figure, which included spot trading as well. Headlines noted this meant Hyperliquid briefly surpassed Robinhood.
Robinhood’s July metrics provide the basis for comparison: $209.1 billion in equities notional plus $16.8 billion in crypto trading, along with $11.9 billion at Bitstamp (a Robinhood subsidiary), totaling around $237.8 billion.
Several outlets noted that July marked the third straight month Hyperliquid’s volumes topped Robinhood’s, which is a striking outcome for a team of only 11. And these are monthly figures, not cumulative totals. That means the platform is showing sustained high-frequency activity rather than a one-off spike.
Engineering for throughput
Hyperliquid’s scale comes from a carefully split state machine operating under one consensus.
HyperCore acts as the exchange engine, with central-limit order books, margin accounting, matching and liquidations all kept fully onchain. The documentation stresses that it avoids offchain order books. Each asset’s book exists onchain as part of the chain state, with price-time priority matching.
HyperEVM is an Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM)-compatible environment on the same blockchain. Because it shares consensus and data availability with HyperCore, applications can build around the exchange without leaving the L1.
Both components rely on HyperBFT, a HotStuff-inspired PoS consensus that delivers a consistent transaction order across the entire system. The design aims for low-latency finality while keeping custody and execution onchain.
This structure differs from typical decentralized exchange (DEX) models: automated market makers (AMMs) that rely on liquidity pools or hybrid order-book DEXs that keep orders onchain but match them offchain.
Hyperliquid instead runs its core exchange logic (order books, matching, margin and liquidations) entirely onchain while still enabling EVM-based apps to integrate natively.
The operating model: How 11 people attained CEX speed
Hyperliquid’s organizational design is deliberately lean.
Founder Jeff Yan has said the core team consists of about 11 people, with hiring intentionally selective to maintain speed and cultural cohesion. The emphasis is on a small, coordinated group rather than rapid headcount expansion.
The project is entirely self-funded and has declined venture capital. Yan frames this as aligning ownership with users and keeping priorities independent of investor timelines. This approach also explains the absence of major centralized-exchange listings — the focus remains on technology and community adoption.
Execution follows a tight feedback loop. When an API outage on July 29 disrupted order execution for 37 minutes, the team reimbursed affected traders $1.99 million the next business day. For a DeFi venue, that speed of response stood out as an example of its “ship, fix, own it” mindset.
“Hiring the wrong person is worse than not hiring at all,” said Yan on staying lean.
Together, selective hiring, independence from venture capital and rapid incident management help explain how a small team can operate at a centralized-exchange cadence while keeping custody and execution fully onchain.
The HLP + Assistance Fund flywheel
Protocol mechanisms align trader activity with liquidity provisioning.
Hyperliquidity Provider (HLP) vault
HLP is a protocol-managed vault that handles market-making and liquidations on HyperCore. Anyone can deposit capital, with contributors sharing in the vault’s profit and loss (PnL) and a portion of trading fees. By making market-making infrastructure open and rules-based, HLP reduces reliance on the bilateral market-maker deals common elsewhere.
Assistance Fund (fee buybacks)
According to DefiLlama dashboards, 93% of protocol fees flow to the Assistance Fund, which buys back and burns HYPE tokens, while 7% go to HLP. This creates a feedback loop: Higher organic volume funds larger buybacks, reducing token supply, while still allocating a portion to support the vault.
Funding mechanics
Perpetual funding on Hyperliquid is purely peer-to-peer, with no protocol take, paid hourly and capped at 4% per hour.
Rates combine a fixed interest (0.01% per eight hours, prorated hourly) with a variable premium derived from an oracle that aggregates centralized exchange spot prices.
This structure helps keep perpetual prices aligned with spot. Payments are made by both sides of the book, reinforcing risk sharing without embedding yield promises.
Distribution and community
Hyperliquid’s token distribution leaned heavily toward users.
On Nov. 29, 2024, the project launched the HYPE genesis airdrop, distributing about 310 million tokens to early participants. The event coincided with the token’s trading debut, reinforcing a community-first approach. Hyperliquid (HYPE) is used for staking in HyperBFT and for gas payments onchain.
Momentum accelerated in mid-2025 when Phantom Wallet integrated Hyperliquid perpetuals directly in-app. Analysts and media noted a clear boost in flow and adoption.
VanEck’s July report attributed $2.66 billion in trading volume, $1.3 million in fees and roughly 20,900 new users to the Phantom rollout. Separate reporting tracked $1.8 billion in routed volume within the first 16 days.
On the product side, HyperEVM went live on Feb. 18, 2025, enabling general-purpose smart contracts and creating pathways for wallets, vaults and listing processes to integrate around the exchange. That flexibility encouraged outside developers to plug into the ecosystem and supported a steady pipeline of new markets.
Did you know? Hyperliquid’s genesis airdrop distributed around $1.6 billion worth of HYPE across 90,000 users, equal to 31% of the total supply. At peak prices, the average airdrop value exceeded $100,000 per user.
Critiques and risk factors
Decentralization and validator set
In early 2025, researchers and validators raised concerns over validator transparency and centralization. The team acknowledged the issue and said it would make the code open-source after strengthening its security. The team also outlined plans to expand validator participation.
Concentration risk
Hyperliquid’s market share (often estimated at 75%-80% of decentralized perpetuals trading) poses concentration challenges. Commentators highlighted the benefits of network effects but also noted the systemic risks if liquidity shifts or shocks occur at a single venue.
Operational incidents
A 37-minute API outage on July 29 temporarily halted trading. Hyperliquid reimbursed roughly $2 million to users the next day. While the swift refund reinforced its reputation for responsiveness, the event also highlighted the exposure leveraged traders face during outages.
Governance and treasury execution
Observers sometimes scrutinize how protocol-managed vaults allocate capital offchain or across chains, as well as the design of buyback mechanisms. These remain areas of operational risk to watch as Hyperliquid scales.
Did you know? Hyperliquid depends on validator-maintained price oracles. If these oracles are manipulated, it may trigger premature or inaccurate liquidations. To counter this, Hyperliquid limits open interest levels and blocks orders more than 1% away from the oracle price, though the HLP vault is exempt from those restrictions.
Final thoughts: Why Hyperliquid scaled when others stalled
Four factors help explain Hyperliquid’s outsized growth.
First, its execution-first chain design: HyperCore handles onchain matching and margin, while HyperEVM provides composability, both ordered under HyperBFT. Together, this setup delivers near CEX-level latency while keeping custody and state fully onchain.
Second, incentive alignment through fee-funded buybacks (via the Assistance Fund) and the open HLP vault created a reflexive liquidity loop as trading volumes expanded.
Third, maintaining a lean core team of about 11 contributors minimized managerial overhead and kept product cycles fast.
Fourth, distribution advantages (most notably Phantom Wallet’s integration) reduced onboarding friction and expanded reach during a favorable cycle for onchain derivatives.
For those evaluating long-term durability, several watchpoints stand out:
Whether validator decentralization and code open-sourcing progress as promised
How quickly spot markets, central limit order book activity and third-party apps build around HyperEVM
Whether revenue and volume remain resilient as competitors begin adopting similar models.
This article does not contain investment advice or recommendations. Every investment and trading move involves risk, and readers should conduct their own research when making a decision.