In recent developments, the TRON blockchain has surged ahead in network fees, outpacing its main competitor, Ethereum, with a notable increase in transaction activity. Founded by Justin Sun in 2018, TRON has generated $56.7 million in fees over the past month, driven by an impressive 267 million transactions. This achievement marks a 28% lead over Ethereum, which recorded $44.33 million from 49 million transactions during the same period, according to analytics platform Nansen.
However, despite this monthly triumph, TRON lags in yearly fees, accumulating $669.5 million compared to Solana’s $917 million and Ethereum’s staggering $1.06 billion. The TRON ecosystem has witnessed significant activity following several integrations, particularly in August, such as the collaboration to launch Kraken’s tokenized xStocks on the platform. The TRON DAO attributes this uptick in activity to PayFi companies launching services on the blockchain, as well as an increase in stablecoin transfers.
A community spokesperson for the TRON DAO, Sam Elfarra, noted, “TRON has been prioritizing RWAs, Stablecoins, and bringing more assets on-chain…A wide range of dApps and protocols run on TRON (DEXs, lending, payments, NFTs), but current fee revenue is driven more by very high-volume stablecoin transfers than by protocol-level DeFi fees alone.” He elaborated on TRON’s strong share of global blockchain protocol revenue, emphasizing the importance of sustained user activity and a robust stablecoin ecosystem.
In addition to its growing adoption, TRON has gained recognition from the U.S. Commerce Department, which has chosen the blockchain as a platform for securely publishing U.S. GDP figures. This endorsement reflects TRON’s expanding relevance in the U.S. market.
However, not all news has been positive for TRON. Recent tensions involving Justin Sun and the DeFi project World Liberty Financial (WLFI), co-founded by Donald Trump Jr., have cast a shadow over the network’s achievements. Following a controversial asset transfer, Sun’s on-chain address—holding over 500 million WLFI tokens valued at approximately $95 million—was blacklisted by WLFI. This action effectively froze the wallet’s capabilities, raising concerns about whether it will fully impede future token transfers.
Sun expressed his frustration via the social media platform X, stating, “However, during the course of operations, my tokens were unreasonably frozen. As one of the early investors, I joined together with everyone—we bought in the same way, and we all deserve the same rights….I call on the team to respect these principles, unlock my tokens, and let’s move forward together toward the success of World Liberty Financial.” To date, neither World Liberty Financial nor Donald Trump Jr. has publicly addressed the situation.
As TRON continues to solidify its position within the blockchain landscape, the unfolding drama serves as a reminder of the challenges that can arise in fast-evolving financial ecosystems.

