TLDR
Hyperliquid, Pump.fun and EdgeX paid out a combined $96.3 million to token holders over 30 days Hyperliquid led with $50.95 million returned, funded entirely from trading fees with zero spent on incentives Pump.fun returned $22.09 million from $38.81 million in revenue after switching to a 50/50 split model on April 28, 2026 EdgeX paid out $23.26 million despite earning only $8.26 million in protocol revenue, suggesting it is drawing on reserves The DeFi sector is shifting focus from transaction volume and network growth to real, measurable earningsThree DeFi protocols have paid out a combined $96.3 million to token holders in a single 30-day period, according to data from DefiLlama. The protocols are Hyperliquid, Pump.fun and EdgeX.
Source: DefiLlama
The figure stands out because each protocol used a different method to reach it, and not all of the payouts came from organic revenue.
Hyperliquid generated $50.95 million in protocol revenue over the period. The full amount went to token holders. The platform spent nothing on user incentives. A fund called the Assistance Fund, launched in January 2025, captures 97% of trading fees and uses them to buy back Hyperliquid tokens on the open market.
A validator proposal from December 2025 sought to permanently retire around $920 million worth of fund-held tokens. If passed, it would tighten token supply at a structural level.
Pump.fun came in second, returning $22.09 million to holders from $38.81 million in total revenue. The platform ran a 100% buyback policy for nine months before switching to a 50/50 split on April 28, 2026. Half of net fees now feed an automated buy-and-burn contract.
A CoinGecko study found that 73.3% of Pump.fun traders booked realized gains in April 2026, up from a low of 30.1% in June 2025. Active wallets have recovered to 3.14 million from a low of 1.8 million in December 2025. Most gains were small, with 65.1% of profitable wallets earning between $1 and $500.
How EdgeX Paid Out More Than It Earned
EdgeX is the outlier in the group. The protocol paid $23.26 million to token holders while generating only $8.26 million in protocol revenue. The gap suggests the team is drawing on reserves or pre-launch incentive budgets.
The EdgeX token launched on March 31, 2026, and the project is still in an early phase of its tokenomics rollout. The central question for holders is whether the protocol can grow its fee revenue fast enough to cover payouts without relying on reserves.
DeFi’s Shift Toward Real Revenue
The payouts come as the DeFi sector moves away from rewarding users through token emissions toward distributing actual earnings. Andre Cronje, founder of Yearn.Finance, noted that DeFi in 2026 looks more like financial infrastructure than a speculative market.
He pointed to stablecoins reaching a $320 billion market, decentralized exchanges processing over $160 billion in monthly spot volume and lending protocols holding $28 billion in active loans.
Other protocols also returned funds to holders over the same period. Chainlink returned $4.63 million, Aerodrome $3.53 million and Uniswap $3.29 million.
Of the three leading protocols, only Hyperliquid funded its full payout from organic fee revenue. Pump.fun’s model is still being tested following its recent split, and EdgeX has not yet shown its math works without subsidies.
The post DeFi Protocols Hyperliquid, Pump.fun and EdgeX Return $96 Million to Token Holders in 30 Days appeared first on CoinCentral.

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