Key Takeaways:
- Defillama.com data shows stablecoins hit $320.007B on Apr. 16 after $2.54B in 7D inflows.
- Tether’s USDT holds 57.96% ($185.463B), down 2.5%, as Circle’s USDC adds $431M.
- Top 5 ( USDT, USDC, USDS, USDe, DAI) hold 88.47% ($283.097B); 2026 may broaden demand.
Top 5 Stablecoins Control 88% of $320B Market as New Entrants Gain Momentum
The fiat-pegged token economy has set a new high, now totaling $320.007 billion, according to figures recorded by defillama.com. Within that aggregate, Tether’s USDT holds a dominant 57.96% share, translating to a market capitalization of $185.463 billion.
USDT posted a modest 0.75% increase over the past seven days, accounting for $1.373 billion in recorded inflows. Tether’s stablecoin, despite posting gains this year, has ceded ground in overall dominance, slipping from 60.46% to its current 57.96% share, a decline of 2.5%, archived stats show.

USDT is trailed by Circle’s USDC, which continues to hold a substantial footing with a $78.621 billion market capitalization and a 0.55% uptick over the same period. The week’s uptick added more than $431 million to USDC’s coffers. Sky dollar (USDS) holds the third position with a market capitalization of $8.605 billion, though it posted a slight 0.99% decline this week.
Ethena’s USDe trails closely with a $5.827 billion market capitalization and a negligible 0.05% decline. Sky’s USDS has climbed the rankings this year, while USDe has moved in the opposite direction. Sky’s legacy stablecoin, DAI, completes the top five with a market capitalization of $4.581 billion, posting the steepest seven-day drop among the leaders at 1.72%.
The top five stablecoins collectively account for $283.097 billion in market value, according to data from defillama.com. This places their combined share at roughly 88.47% of the sector’s total net worth. Still, other competitors such as World Liberty Financial’s USD1, Paypal’s PYUSD, Blackrock’s BUIDL, Circle’s USYC, and Ondo’s USDY have recorded notable shifts this year.
A wide range of projects beyond the top ten have also been registering increased activity in 2026. Each operates under a different model, targeting a different slice of demand. The sector’s climb past $320 billion reflects a sustained pattern of capital moving into dollar-denominated tokens across both centralized and decentralized platforms. Inflows have held positive for multiple consecutive weeks. Projects outside the top ten are seeing activity pick up, a sign that demand is spreading.
Whether that broadening holds depends on market conditions, regulatory clarity, and how issuers respond to both. For now, the numbers point in one direction.