If 2024 was the year of the crypto reawakening, 2025 was the year the plumbing finally got permitted. This year, the emerging industry entered January with tentativeIf 2024 was the year of the crypto reawakening, 2025 was the year the plumbing finally got permitted. This year, the emerging industry entered January with tentative

The top 12 crypto winners of 2025: who got it right this year?

If 2024 was the year of the crypto reawakening, 2025 was the year the plumbing finally got permitted.

This year, the emerging industry entered January with tentative optimism and exited December with federal statutes.

As a result, the narrative shifted definitively from “crypto as a casino” to “crypto as capital markets infrastructure.”

During this period, volumes moved on-chain, policy moved into the White House, and major asset managers moved past their hesitation, as evidenced most starkly by Vanguard’s reversal earlier this month, which allowed crypto ETFs on its platform.

However, in a year defined by record-breaking flows and legislative victories, not everyone shared the spoils equally.

The winners of 2025 weren’t just the assets that went up; they were the protocols, people, and products that fundamentally secured their place in the future of finance.

Based on CryptoSlate's analysis, here are the 12 definitive winners of the year and why they mattered:

1. The United States & The Trump Administration

There is no discussion of the crypto landscape in 2025 without acknowledging the sheer force of the US pivot. For years, the industry operated with one foot out the door, eyeing Dubai or Singapore.

In 2025, the US slammed that door shut and locked everyone inside—happily. Considering this, the victory is shared between the jurisdiction itself and the catalyst at the top.

The 47th President’s administration delivered on the industry's longest-held wish list in under 12 months, effectively re-onshoring the digital asset economy.

Several Executive Orders backing digital assets set the tone, but the strategic victories were tactical.

The signing of the GENIUS Act on July 18 provided the first federal definition for stablecoins, while the “Strategic Bitcoin Reserve” Executive Order in March signaled to sovereign wealth funds globally that digital assets were a matter of national security.

Crucially, by pushing a leadership change at the SEC and the CFTC, the administration cleared the “regulation by enforcement” fog.

Essentially, Trump's actions have set the tone to make the US “the crypto capital of the world.”

  • The 2026 Outlook: US Hegemony. We expect the US to export its new standards aggressively. With the Jan. 1 Executive Order also explicitly prohibiting a CBDC, the lane is clear for private sector innovation: the dollar will remain digital, but it will be issued by Tether, Circle, and banks, not the Fed.

2. US Spot ETFs (IBIT, alongside the Ethereum, Solana, and XRP Cohort)

The premier vehicle for institutional access didn't just survive its sophomore year; it thrived despite BTC's poor performance.

This was evidenced by BlackRock iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) emerging as one of the top 10 US ETFs by inflows, outpacing traditional heavyweights such as the Invesco QQQ Trust and the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD).

IBIT Cumulative Net InflowsIBIT Cumulative Net Inflows (Source: SoSo Value)

Away from the flagship digital asset, Ethereum spot ETFs cemented their status as the default on-ramp for wealth managers, rendering the “not your keys, not your coins” debate irrelevant for the suit-and-tie crowd.

The pivotal moment came in September when the SEC approved **generic listing standards**. This technical but crucial policy win slashed the red tape for future products, removing the need for 19b-4 filings for every single new ticker.

As a result, the market welcomed an avalanche of new products focused on other digital assets, such as Solana and XRP, which also delivered strong performance this year.

  • The 2026 Outlook: With Vanguard opening the gates on Dec. 1, expect a flood of basket and covered-call products. Deeper options markets should begin to dampen realized volatility, finally making the asset class palatable for conservative pension funds.

3. Solana (SOL)

Solana effectively shed its “beta” reputation in 2025, as the “fast but breaks” narrative is dead.

At the same time, Solana pulled off the most difficult pivot in crypto this year by going from the “memecoin casino” to the “liquidity layer” of the global market.

While it maintained its cultural dominance, CoinGecko reported that Solana was the most-followed blockchain ecosystem globally in 2025 for the second consecutive year.

The network is no longer just about speculative tokens; it is now where efficient capital lives.

According to Artemis data, Solana has emerged as a fundamental liquidity layer, with on-chain SOL-USD trading volume exceeding the combined SOL spot volume on Binance and Bybit, two of the top three centralized exchanges by trading volume, for three consecutive months.

Solana Onchain VolumeSolana Onchain Volume Beats Binance and Bybit Spot Volume (Source: Artemis)

Essentially, Solana has differentiated itself as the primary venue for execution-sensitive activity. It is no longer just competing with Ethereum; it is competing with Nasdaq.

  • The 2026 Outlook: This volume flip signals a structural change. Price discovery is now happening on-chain rather than on centralized exchanges. Solana enters 2026 not as a “beta” network, but as the primary venue for high-frequency, stablecoin-denominated commerce.

4. Ethereum layer-2 Base

If Solana won on speed, Coinbase’s Layer-2 network, Base, won on distribution.

By leveraging the US-based exchange's massive existing user base, Base became the sticky default for consumer apps and stablecoin experimentation.

Base proved that in 2025, distribution matters more than novel cryptography. It became the launchpad for “normie” crypto—consumer fintech apps that use crypto rails on the backend without the user ever knowing. It is the bridge between the chaotic on-chain world and the regulated safety of Coinbase.

  • The 2026 Outlook: Watch for “wallet-native commerce.” Base is likely to be the engine room for Coinbase's push into merchant payments next year.

5. Ripple and XRP

After years of legal purgatory, 2025 was the year Ripple and XRP were finally set free.

The long-running battle between the firm and the SEC officially concluded with a final judgment that cleared the runway for institutional adoption.

As a result, XRP's narrative shifted overnight from “litigation risk” to “liquidity engine,” driving its value upward and paving the way for the launch of the first Spot XRP ETFs in November.

XRP ETFs Daily FlowXRP ETFs Daily Flow (Source: SoSo Value)

At the same time, the company behind it, Ripple, spent the year aggressively buying the plumbing of traditional finance.

Ripple deployed over $4 billion in strategic acquisitions this year alone, most notably the purchase of prime broker Hidden Road, treasury management firm GTreasury, and stablecoin infrastructure provider Rail.

These moves have effectively transformed Ripple from a “payments company” into a full-stack institutional powerhouse.

  • The 2026 Outlook: The “ETF-ification” of XRP is just the start. With the legal overhang gone and Wall Street products live, 2026 will be about integration. Expect the newly acquired treasury and brokerage arms to begin cross-selling the RLUSD stablecoin to Fortune 500 clients, finally bridging the gap between the XRP Ledger and corporate balance sheets.

6. Zcash & The Privacy Sector

The surprise comeback of the year was Zcash and the privacy sector as a whole.

Emerging as the undisputed best-performing sector of 2025, privacy coins shed their “illicit” stigma to become the darlings of the post-surveillance economy.

Privacy Coins Outperformance in 2025Privacy Coins Outperformance in 2025 (Source: Artemis)

While Zcash led the charge, the momentum was sector-wide. Ethereum developers accelerated their privacy initiatives, while other privacy solutions finally gained mainnet traction.

Moreover, the regulatory thaw was palpable as the SEC held formal meetings with privacy protocol leaders to discuss compliant architecture. Notably, that would have been unthinkable a year ago.

  • The 2026 Outlook: We are witnessing the birth of “Confidential DeFi.” In 2026, expect a bifurcation where privacy becomes a premium feature for compliant actors. Wall Street will aggressively adopt these “selective disclosure” tools to prevent MEV (Maximal Extractable Value) front-running and protect proprietary trading strategies.

7. Tokenization (RWAs)

Real World Assets (RWAs) moved from “pilot programs” to “critical plumbing,” heavily aided by a friendly SEC.

The Commission’s shift away from hostile enforcement allowed major players to integrate these assets without fear of a Wells Notice.

The watershed moment was BlackRock’s BUIDL fund being accepted as off-exchange collateral on Binance. This blurred the lines between TradFi and the crypto market structure.

By December, tokenized money market funds and T-bills had surpassed $8 billion in AUM, while the broader RWA market is around $20 billion.

RWA AssetsRWA Assets (Source: RWA.xyz)

Moreover, traditional financial giants like BlackRock, JPMorgan, Fidelity, Nasdaq, and Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (DTCC) are heavily banking on the sector to make the traditional financial sector more transparent and efficient.

Like Paul Atkins, the SEC Chair, said:

  • The 2026 Outlook: Repo-like efficiency. As major banks like JPM and BNY continue to integrate these assets, we expect 24/7 collateral markets to emerge, pushing the sector toward $18 billion AUM.

8. Stablecoins

The “killer app” debate is over. Stablecoins are the rail. The sector's market cap breached $300 billion in October, while Ethereum-based stablecoin supply hit an all-time high of $166 billion in September.

In fact, Token Terminal stated that the total number of stablecoin holders is at an all-time high of around 200 million.

Stablecoin HoldersStablecoin Holders (Source: Token Terminal)

This shows that the sector's growth was driven by these assets' ability to settle instantly, 24/7, across borders.

Meanwhile, legislative progress in the US, especially the passage of the GENIUS Act, provided the legal clarity for banks to enter the fray.

Essentially, stablecoins are no longer just trading chips; they are becoming the settlement layer for global fintech. Jeremy NG, the founder of Open Eden, captured it best, saying:

  • The 2026 Outlook: Yield. We expect programmatic treasuries and FX use cases to drive the float toward a base case of $380 billion next year.

9. Perpetual DEXs

On-chain derivatives crossed the credibility chasm as monthly volumes hit a record $1.2 trillion in October.

This sector won because it successfully siphoned volume from centralized exchanges (CEXs) by offering self-custody and, frankly, better incentives.

Perps DEX VolumePerps DEX Rising Volume (Source: DeFiLlama)

The rise of perp DEXs like Hyperliquid and Aster signals a maturity in DeFi market structure. Traders are increasingly comfortable leaving billions in smart contract risk to avoid counterparty risk.

  • The 2026 Outlook: On-chain Open Interest (OI) is becoming a legitimate macro risk barometer. However, 2026 will likely bring a brutal fee war as protocols fight to retain that $1.2 trillion volume.

10. Prediction Markets

2025 was the year event contracts entered the US mainstream as Kalshi and Polymarket, the two dominant platforms in the sector, printed record numbers this year.

However, the headline winner is that several traditional financial institutions and crypto-native firms like Gemini and Coinbase have also thrown their hats into the nascent sector.

Prediction Market Weekly VolumePrediction Market Weekly Volume (Source: Dune Analytics)

This sector won because it bridged the gap between “gambling” and “finance.” With Polymarket also receiving a path forward via an amended CFTC framework, event contracts are moving from niche internet curiosities to regulated hedging instruments.

  • The 2026 Outlook: Listed products. Event contracts are becoming a standardized asset class. Watch for wallet rails, and USDC flows to ride this wave as the “outcome economy” grows to a projected $60 billion notional.

11. Hong Kong

While the US focused on legislation, Hong Kong focused on execution supremacy—and the data proves it. In Q3 2025, Hong Kong's ETP market officially overtook South Korea and Japan to become the third largest globally by turnover, with average daily turnover hitting HK$37.8 billion (+150% YoY).

The city's strategy of regulatory clarity paid off in tangible exchange milestones. The VATP (Virtual Asset Trading Platform) regime matured from a “deemed-to-be-licensed” purgatory into a robust ecosystem.

By mid-2025, the SFC granted full licenses to additional major global exchanges, bringing the total number of licensed exchanges to 11. This effectively funneled regional institutional liquidity into a compliant, bank-connected net, isolating unregulated players.

At the same time, the city's Stablecoins Ordinance that came into force on Aug. 1, created a pristine sandbox that attracted over 30 applicants by the September deadline.

  • The 2026 Outlook: The “licensed stablecoin” flywheel. With the first batch of stablecoin licenses expected in early 2026, Hong Kong is set to become Asia's settlement hub. By combining a top-3 ETP market with licensed stablecoin rails, the city has successfully positioned itself as the “institutional liquidity valve” for the APAC region.

12. The Early Believers (Crypto Investors)

The final spot on this list belongs to you—the cohort that stayed.

Over the past grueling years, early believers were told that crypto was a fraud, a bubble, or a dead end. They endured the collapse of 2022, the regulatory chokehold of the Gensler years, and the boredom of 2024. In 2025, they were vindicated.

This year wasn't just about “numbers go up”; it was about “thesis proved right.”

As a result, the early believers successfully front-ran the most prominent institutions on earth. When BlackRock, Vanguard, and Sovereign Wealth Funds finally entered the arena in force this year, they were buying bags from individuals who had high-conviction foresight when the outlook was bleakest.

  • The 2026 Outlook: As this cohort realizes generational wealth, they are not exiting the ecosystem—they are becoming its bankers. Expect this class of investors to become the primary source of liquidity (LPs) for the new decentralized capital markets, funding the next wave of innovation that banks are still too slow to understand

The post The top 12 crypto winners of 2025: who got it right this year? appeared first on CryptoSlate.

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