Hyperliquid Captures 70% of Decentralized Perp Volume as Leverage Defaults to 50x

What You Need to Know
- Hyperliquid controls over 70% of decentralized perpetual trading volume with $4 trillion cumulative trades processed.
- Platform operates on Layer 1 blockchain, processes 200,000 orders per second, and charges zero gas fees.
- Maker limit orders cost 0.01% while market orders cost more; professional traders use 2x-5x leverage with stop losses.
- Decentralized exchanges gaining market share from centralized exchanges due to regulatory pressure on offshore CEXs.
Hyperliquid now accounts for more than 70% of all decentralized perpetual trading volume and has processed over $4 trillion in cumulative trades, a concentration that would have seemed implausible for a single DEX two years ago. The platform runs on its own Layer 1, handles 200,000 orders per second, and charges zero gas fees, which together explain why volume migrated here faster than to any previous perp DEX challenger.
The fee structure is where most traders leave money on the table first. Limit orders cost 0.01% as a maker fee; market orders cost more and add slippage on a platform where tight execution is the entire point. This mirrors a pattern visible across every cycle: retail traders default to market orders because they feel immediate, while the traders who survive multiple liquidation events learn to work the order book instead. The HLP vault offers a different angle entirely, letting depositors supply USDC to act as a passive market maker and liquidation absorber in exchange for yield. It is not a savings account. Drawdown risk is real, and anyone who deposited into comparable vault structures during volatile periods in 2021 and 2022 learned that counterparty flow can turn against the vault quickly.
Professional traders on the platform cap leverage at 2x to 5x and set stop losses before entering, not after. The interface allows 50x. That gap is the story.
The broader implication is what Hyperliquid’s dominance signals about where decentralized derivatives are heading in this cycle. Centralized exchanges still hold the majority of overall perp volume, but the gap is narrowing faster than most institutional desks have updated their assumptions. Regulatory pressure on offshore CEXs, particularly those without clear jurisdictional footing, has pushed sophisticated retail and smaller prop desks toward on-chain venues that offer comparable speed and depth. Hyperliquid’s Layer 1 architecture, rather than being built on Ethereum or a general-purpose rollup, means it controls its own throughput and fee policy, which is a structural advantage that becomes more visible as network congestion affects competitors.
The funding rate arbitrage strategy described, where traders collect payments from the dominant directional side of the market, is one of the oldest tools in the perp playbook. It works until sentiment flips sharply and the crowded side unwinds. In a market where open interest has been climbing alongside price, that asymmetry is worth pricing in before sizing a position.
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