Stablecoin issuers generated substantial real revenue in 2025, with Ethereum serving as the primary settlement layer supporting that growth.
Data from the provided chart shows that revenue attributable to stablecoin supply deployed on Ethereum steadily increased throughout the year, tracking closely with expansion in on-chain supply rather than short-term market volatility.
By the fourth quarter of 2025, stablecoin issuers were collectively earning roughly $1.4 billion per quarter from Ethereum-based deployments, contributing to an estimated $5 billion in total annual revenue for the year. This marks a clear transition from experimental usage toward sustained, infrastructure-level cash flow.
The chart illustrates a consistent rise in stablecoin supply on Ethereum across all four quarters of 2025. Supply grew by approximately $50 billion over the year, exceeding $180 billion by Q4. This expansion occurred alongside a steady increase in issuer revenue, rather than preceding or lagging it, highlighting a direct structural relationship.
Quarterly revenue attributable to Ethereum-based supply rose from just above $1.1 billion in Q1 to roughly $1.4 billion by Q4. The progression suggests that as more stablecoin balances settled on Ethereum, issuers captured higher aggregate yield from the assets backing those balances.
Importantly, the chart shows no meaningful divergence between supply growth and revenue generation. Instead, revenue scaled proportionally, reinforcing the view that Ethereum-hosted stablecoins are functioning as productive financial infrastructure rather than idle liquidity.
The revenue represented in the chart is derived from yield earned on reserve assets backing stablecoin supply. For issuers operating across multiple chains, revenue is allocated on a pro-rata basis depending on where supply is deployed. As Ethereum consistently hosts the largest share of stablecoin supply for major issuers, it also captures the largest portion of issuer revenue.
This structure explains why revenue continued to rise even during periods when supply growth moderated slightly quarter to quarter. As long as Ethereum maintains settlement dominance, incremental increases in supply translate directly into recurring, yield-driven income for issuers.
From a market-structure perspective, this reinforces Ethereum’s role not as a speculative venue, but as a balance-sheet layer where stablecoin liabilities are actively monetized through traditional financial instruments.
The 2025 data highlights a key structural dynamic. Ethereum is operating as a neutral, scalable settlement layer capable of supporting financial products at internet scale, while enabling issuers to generate predictable, non-speculative revenue streams.
As stablecoin supply surpassed $180 billion by year-end and issuer revenue reached $1.4 billion per quarter, the relationship between settlement choice and economic output became increasingly explicit. For builders, this underscores why Ethereum remains the default base layer for large-scale financial products: it concentrates liquidity, maximizes deployable supply, and converts usage directly into measurable revenue.
Going forward, confirmation of this trend will depend on whether Ethereum continues to retain the majority share of stablecoin settlement. If supply remains anchored at these levels or expands further, issuer revenue is likely to remain structurally elevated, regardless of broader market cycles.
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