Sonic [S] has posted a sharp gain over the past day at press time, yet the rally rests on uncertain ground as the network keeps struggling with a high user churn rate.
On-chain activity, spot volume, and transaction count in particular have shaped the token’s performance across this window, propping up the price while a reworked tokenomics model and a fresh leadership team settle into place.
Sonic’s rally rests on a thin on-chain rebound
The recent spike in Sonic’s price traces back to a rise in on-chain transactions, which have climbed from 128,600 to 238,400, close to a doubling over the period. The surge points to greater utility for Sonic across the market as users move in to capture gains.
Most of that activity ran through the spot market, where chain spot volume swung from $678,600 on the 30th of June to $1.6 million at the time of this reporting, roughly 2.35 times more capital changing hands.


Rising on-chain activity tends to support price recovery in the short term, though Sonic’s rebound remains slow against a broader backdrop of decline.
The 30-day view shows chain transactions and on-chain spot volume down 65% and 31.6%, respectively, placing overall network performance in recovery rather than full expansion.
User base stays flat as daily activity thins out
The chain’s user count has held relatively flat through this move, and no clear bullish case has emerged yet.
Between the 25th of June and the latest data, daily active users ranged from 7,600 to 6,400, showing that only a limited pool is transacting on the chain.
Such subdued activity stands out further against Sonic’s peak of 62,200 daily active users on the 4th of June, a figure that has since fallen nearly tenfold, suggesting a large share of participants has stepped away and left the chain underused.


For now, on-chain activity looks sufficient to hold a price balance but not to ignite the further rally many anticipate. Off-chain data on exchanges, particularly the perpetual market for S, adds context, showing some investors leaning into the gradual rebound in on-chain utility.
At press time, the Funding Rate sat at 0.0052%, a sign that perpetual traders have positioned for more upside, even if that upside stays short-lived.
Leadership exits and a halted mint reshape tokenomics
The performance follows a wider set of recent developments, chief among them a governance overhaul that saw longtime board members Andre Cronje, Michael Kong, and David Richardson resign, with Matt Visser stepping in as chief executive.
S had already fallen roughly 97% from its January 2025 peak of $1.03 by the time those resignations took effect. The shift extends to tokenomics, with Sonic Labs, the team behind the token, halting its scheduled 47.6 million S annual mint, equal to 1.5% of supply, as it steps back from the yearly inflation it began issuing in 2025.
Final Summary
- Sonic’s rally is short-term; activity nearly doubled, but 30-day volume was still down 65%.
- Daily users sat near 6,400 against a June 4 peak of 62,200, so demand hasn’t returned.






