Solana exchange-traded funds posted steady net inflows throughout the second half of December 2025, supported by staking-enabled products across all issuers.
While volumes remained smaller compared with Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs, the data shows persistent allocation rather than exits, even during the holiday period.
Daily Solana ETF Flows: December Breakdown
Between December 17 and December 30, according to data from Farside, Solana ETFs recorded net inflows on most trading days, with cumulative activity spread across multiple issuers:
- December 17: +$11.0 million
- December 18: +$13.2 million
- December 19: +$3.6 million
- December 22: +$7.4 million
- December 23: +$4.2 million
- December 24: +$1.5 million
- December 26: $0.0 million
- December 29: +$2.9 million
- December 30: +$5.2 million
Across this period, Solana ETFs attracted approximately $49.0 million in net inflows, despite broader crypto ETF volatility during the same window.
Issuer-Level Contributions
Flows were distributed rather than concentrated, indicating diversified institutional positioning:
- Bitwise (BSOL) led inflows on multiple days, including $7.0M (Dec 17), $3.0M (Dec 18), and $3.9M (Dec 30)
- Fidelity (FSOL) contributed consistently, with $2.9M (Dec 17), $6.6M (Dec 18), and $5.8M (Dec 22)
- VanEck (VSOL) added smaller but recurring inflows, including $1.6M (Dec 22) and $0.4M (Dec 29)
- Grayscale (GSOL) posted intermittent inflows, such as $2.5M (Dec 18) and $1.3M (Dec 30)
- 21Shares (TSOL) and Franklin Templeton (SOEZ) recorded no meaningful flows during this period
Despite fee differences, flows did not cluster around the cheapest product, suggesting issuer trust and staking exposuremattered more than marginal cost.
What the Data Signals
The numbers point to measured accumulation rather than speculative inflows. Even during thin holiday liquidity, Solana ETFs avoided sustained outflows and continued to attract capital in small, consistent increments.
With staking enabled across all products and no major redemption pressure visible, Solana ETFs appear to be establishing themselves as a long-term yield-oriented allocation, rather than a short-term trading vehicle heading into 2026.






