DEX volume extends decline in April, outflows reach spot and futures markets

- DEX activity fell to around $166B in April, the lowest level since August 2024.
- The loss of trust in tokens and DeFi in general led to an outflow of liquidity.
- Solana DEX activity broke from the trend, driven by USDC liquidity growth and trading on Meteora.
DEX activity declined in April, extending an overall downward trend. The liquidity outflows and volume declines affected both spot and futures markets.
DEX activity dipped again in April, extending the overall downward trend since October 2025. Trading on DEX reflects crypto sentiment for native traders, as well as general interest in long-tail assets.
In April, total DEX volumes reached $166.78B, the lowest level since August 2024, according to DeFi Llama data.

DEX trading is now around 59% lower than the October 2025 peak, reflecting the generally weaker sentiment in the crypto market.
As of early 2025, DEX volumes still outperformed results for January, February, and March of the past five years. In April, however, DEX volumes fell below the levels from 2025 and 2024, stalling the expansion trend.
DEX activity makes up 14.57% of centralized trading, standing within its usual range. The ratio is preserved due to the outflow of traders from centralized markets.
Why did liquidity flow out of DEX trading?
The main reason for the slowdown comes from Uniswap and PancakeSwap, the two most widely used DEXs. Traders shifted to Hyperliquid and HIP-3, gaining exposure to perpetual futures for stocks, gold, and oil.
The idea of decentralized trading remains, but activity shifted from token swaps to other markets. Token hype diminished, and memes no longer attracted speculative trading. Some DEXs were still used for the most liquid crypto assets, or for swaps between stablecoins.
DEX activity also reflected the more stagnant crypto sentiment. Traders no longer expected hype to lift all tokens. Instead, only specific assets rallied, supported by market makers and deliberate liquidity providers.
Overall, liquidity providers also abandoned DEX pairs due to the risk of rug pulls and token crashes. Despite the near-peak supply of stablecoins, they were not really flowing into DEXs.
According to Artemis data, BNB Chain and Ethereum also saw significant outflows of liquidity in the past month. Some of the inflows moved to Hyperliquid or to Polymarket, which is still displacing DEX speculation.

DEXs also lost the inflows of new tokens, either from meme platforms or token sales. The slowdown of token sales or ICOs led to fewer new listings. More meme tokens from Pump.fun also remain in the “trenches,” and never graduate to exchanges.
DeFi hacks affected trust in DEXs
DEX activity slowed down during a month with a record number of hacks. Since smart contracts are generally vulnerable, DEXs were seen as potentially unsafe destinations.
Liquidity pools are also a common target for exploits, where flawed smart contracts lead to drained liquidity or stolen tokens.
Most of the outflows from exchanges happened on EVM-compatible networks and on Ethereum. Solana DEX activity defied the trend, but did not offset the overall outflows. Meteora displaced Raydium and PumpSwap as the leading exchange.
Solana survived the DEX outflows due to aggressive USDC minting, which boosted liquidity pairs on Meteora. The absence of hacks on Solana also kept traders more confident.
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Disclaimer. The information provided is not trading advice. Cryptopolitan.com holds no liability for any investments made based on the information provided on this page. We strongly recommend independent research and/or consultation with a qualified professional before making any investment decisions.

Hristina Vasileva
Hristina Vasileva specializes in DeFi, business, and economic news. She graduated from Sofia University with an MA in Philosophy, after completing a 4-year BA in Business Administration, Journalism, and Mass Communication. She has worked for one of the country’s leading newspapers, covering the commodities and corporate results beat. Currently, Hristina is a contributing news author at Cryptopolitan.
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