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Binance Still Rules, But a Decentralized Challenger Just Broke Into the Top 10

Binance Still Rules, But a Decentralized Challenger Just Broke Into the Top 10

The latest perpetuals trading data from CoinGecko makes one thing clear: derivatives are running circles around spot markets, and centralized exchanges aren't giving up their grip anytime soon.

Key Takeaways
  • Binance controls more than double the perps volume of its nearest rival, cementing an outsized dominance in derivatives markets
  • The perpetuals market grew 75% between 2024 and 2026, now exceeding $7.24T in monthly volume
  • Hyperliquid is the only decentralized exchange to crack the top 10 – a first for DeFi in perpetuals
  • DEX market share in perps has expanded 5x in two years, now sitting at roughly 10% of total volume

According to figures published by CoinGecko, Binance leads the top 10 exchanges by perps volume with $13.6 trillion – more than double what second-place OKX recorded at $5.8T. MEXC follows closely at $5.7T, with Bybit and BitMart rounding out the top five at $4.7T and $4.6T respectively. Gate, Bitget, Toobit, BingX, and Hyperliquid fill out the rest of the list.

The numbers reflect a market that has fundamentally shifted. Perpetual futures – contracts with no expiry date – have become the dominant instrument in crypto trading. The perps market expanded 75% between 2024 and 2026, reaching over $7.24 trillion in monthly volume by January 2026. Spot trading, by comparison, has been left in the rear-view mirror.

What makes this snapshot unusual isn’t Binance at the top. It’s number 10.

Hyperliquid, a fully on-chain perpetuals exchange, has become the first decentralized platform to break into the global top 10 for derivatives volume – recording $1.5T. That figure would have been unthinkable two years ago, when DEX infrastructure was largely dismissed as too slow and too fragmented to compete with the major centralized venues.

DEX Share Grows Fivefold – and Hyperliquid Is Leading It

The numbers back the shift. DEX market share in perpetuals has grown fivefold over the past two years, now accounting for roughly 10.2% of total perps volume. Hyperliquid is leading that charge, and the platform’s architecture is part of why. Built on HyperBFT consensus, it delivers sub-second trade execution – a far cry from the sluggish on-chain experiences that deterred professional traders in earlier cycles.

Analysts tracking the space have started looking past raw volume toward a more meaningful metric: Open Interest relative to volume. Hyperliquid sits at an OI-to-volume ratio of around 45%, meaning nearly half of its activity represents persistent, held positions rather than the rapid-fire wash trading that can inflate headline numbers on centralized books. That kind of capital efficiency is attracting attention from traders who want verifiable, on-chain data rather than figures they have to take on trust.

CEXs Still Hold the Edge – For Now

The centralized exchanges aren’t standing still. Their edge remains real – deeper liquidity, tighter spreads, fiat on-ramps, and the ability to offer unified margin across spot, futures, and options products. Institutional desks in particular have little incentive to migrate when the infrastructure on major CEXs already serves their needs.

But the user experience argument – long the most credible objection to perp DEXs – is losing its force. Traders who have moved to platforms like Hyperliquid describe the interface as functionally comparable to what they’d find on Bybit or OKX. The UX gap, for years a structural advantage for centralized players, has largely closed.

What Comes Next: RWAs, Institutions, and AI Traders

Looking ahead, the perpetuals market is forecast to push into new territory. Real World Asset perpetuals – on-chain contracts tied to oil, gold, and pre-IPO equities – are emerging as the next frontier, extending derivatives infrastructure beyond crypto entirely. Institutional capital, increasingly drawn to the transparency and auditability of on-chain settlement, is expected to continue moving toward high-quality DEX venues. Some projections put total perp DEX open interest above $50 billion before the end of 2026.

There’s also the AI factor. Algorithmic agents executing high-frequency strategies are already accounting for a growing share of daily volume across both CEX and DEX platforms. As those systems become more sophisticated, the exchanges best positioned to capture that flow will likely be the ones that can offer the lowest latency and the cleanest execution data – criteria that favor the technically ambitious end of the market.

For now, Binance’s lead is not in question. But Hyperliquid’s appearance in the top 10 is not a footnote. It’s a data point that the structure of this market is changing – and doing so faster than most expected.


The information provided in this article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Coindoo.com does not endorse or recommend any specific investment strategy or cryptocurrency. Always conduct your own research and consult with a licensed financial advisor before making any investment decisions.

Author

Reporter at Coindoo

Kosta joined the team in 2021 and quickly established himself with his thirst for knowledge, incredible dedication, and analytical thinking. He not only covers a wide range of current topics, but also writes excellent reviews, PR articles, and educational materials. His articles are also quoted by other news agencies.

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