PrimeXBT has rolled out full Solana network support for its payments and wallet infrastructure, allowing users to deposit and withdraw SOL, USDT, and USDC directly via Solana. The company framed the update as a major upgrade to its crypto rails, emphasizing faster settlement, lower costs, and more funding options for global clients. :contentReference[oaicite:0]{index=0}
According to PrimeXBT’s product update, Solana transfers typically settle in under two seconds, and the broker charges zero platform fees on deposits and withdrawals. Combined, that means users can move stablecoins on Solana at near-zero total cost, paying only minimal network fees. :contentReference[oaicite:1]{index=1}
The integration also expands PrimeXBT’s stablecoin pathways. Traders can now fund accounts with USDT and USDC on Solana alongside existing networks, reducing friction for users who already park liquidity in the Solana ecosystem. :contentReference[oaicite:2]{index=2}
Why does Solana support matter for traders?
Exchange and broker competition is increasingly about fiat and stablecoin on/off ramps, not just trading fees. In fast markets, funding latency is risk. A trader who needs to top up margin during a volatility spike can’t afford 10–30 minute confirmation waits on congested networks, nor can they pay double-digit dollars per transfer on Ethereum when accounts are rebalanced frequently.
Solana’s value proposition is the opposite: high throughput and inexpensive transfers. For PrimeXBT users, that translates into quicker account funding for crypto futures, CFDs, and multi-asset trades—use cases where speed is part of the edge. PrimeXBT already supports a range of Solana-based assets through crypto CFDs and futures, so native Solana rails make moving in and out of those positions more seamless. :contentReference[oaicite:3]{index=3}
There’s also a structural reason this matters in 2025: stablecoins are becoming the default settlement layer for global retail crypto. USDT and USDC volumes on low-fee chains (Solana, Tron, Base, Arbitrum) are taking share from slower, pricier rails. PrimeXBT’s move is essentially a bet that users want cheaper stablecoin mobility more than they want another marginal cut in maker/taker fees.
Investor Takeaway
Is this part of a bigger Solana and stablecoin trend?
Yes. Solana has been leaning hard into being a “payments-first” chain, and 2024–2025 saw its stablecoin footprint deepen as DeFi, NFT markets, and consumer apps matured. PrimeXBT’s Solana onboarding fits a broader industry pattern: exchanges and brokers are racing to support whichever chain offers the most efficient stablecoin settlement for their target users. :contentReference[oaicite:4]{index=4}
In practice, this is how adoption compounds. Retail users keep balances where transfers are cheap; trading venues follow the balances; more venues increase utility; and the cycle reinforces itself. PrimeXBT enabling SOL, USDT, and USDC transfers on Solana helps normalize Solana as a rail for “serious” trading capital, not just DeFi-native activity.
PrimeXBT also positioned the update as a bridge between traditional markets and crypto, noting ongoing expansion in regulated jurisdictions (including recent licensing momentum in regions like South Africa). That framing matters because access to low-cost crypto rails inside a broker that supports both crypto derivatives and classic CFDs gives multi-asset traders a single capital hub. :contentReference[oaicite:5]{index=5}
What’s next — and what should users watch out for?
Expect more networks, more stablecoin variants, and tighter integration between wallets and trading products. PrimeXBT has been steadily broadening its payments stack, and Solana support is likely a prelude to deeper ecosystem tie-ins, including more SOL-native tokens and potentially faster internal settlement between accounts. :contentReference[oaicite:6]{index=6}
But there are real operational risks to keep in mind. PrimeXBT stresses address verification and confirmation checks, and its help center reminds users to select the correct network when depositing—an especially important point now that USDT/USDC exist on many chains. Sending assets to the wrong network can lead to delays or loss. :contentReference[oaicite:7]{index=7}
For investors, the upgrade is positive, but not a free lunch: cheaper rails can encourage over-trading, and leveraged products amplify both wins and drawdowns. Solana integration improves the plumbing; it doesn’t change risk management fundamentals.
Investor Takeaway
Visual: Suggested feature image — a clean PNG showing Solana + stablecoin icons flowing into a trading app interface (no text overlay).
Optional visual #2: Screenshot of PrimeXBT’s Solana deposit/withdrawal page highlighting SOL/USDT/USDC network choice. :contentReference[oaicite:8]{index=8}

