The total stablecoin market capitalization on Aptos has crossed the $2 billion threshold, reaching a new all-time high around June 18. The milestone extends a longer liquidity accumulation phase already visible in the network’s recent annual reporting and settlement metrics.
According to the Aptos Foundation’s annual report, stablecoin market cap on the layer-1 rose 91% year-over-year to $1.95 billion during the April 2025 to May 2026 reporting period. The latest move above $2 billion shows that liquidity continued expanding after that report closed.
Stablecoin Depth Strengthens Settlement Capacity
The same reporting cycle showed monthly stablecoin volume peaking at $68.13 billion. That level of activity suggests Aptos is not only holding more stablecoin supply, but also processing meaningful settlement flow across the network.
Twelve months of building the full stack for markets and machines. One report. @TokenRelations recently published the Aptos Annual Report, covering April 2025 through May 2026. What happened:
+2.95B transactions processed. 532% increase year-over-year.
Stablecoin market cap…
— Aptos (@Aptos) June 15, 2026
For base-layer infrastructure, stablecoin depth is important because it supports payments, trading, DeFi liquidity and institutional treasury activity. More circulating stable supply can make a chain more useful for applications that depend on predictable dollar-denominated settlement.
The stablecoin increase also aligns with Aptos’ broader activity in tokenized real-world assets. Reported on-chain RWA value rose 58.5% to $869.9 million, reflecting growth in tokenized financial instruments deployed on the network.
That matters because stablecoin liquidity and RWAs often reinforce each other. Tokenized Treasuries, money market products and other institutional instruments require reliable settlement assets, while deeper stablecoin pools can make those products easier to use.
Issuer Breakdown Still Needs More Detail
Chain-level analytics will be needed to distinguish exchange liquidity provisioning, institutional treasury allocation and organic on-chain demand behind the latest stablecoin growth.
The milestone should therefore be read as a liquidity-maturation signal, not a standalone adoption verdict. Crossing $2 billion indicates deeper capital presence, but the durability of that capital will depend on retention, transaction activity and real settlement use.
For Aptos, the next test is whether stablecoin balances continue to support sustained payment, DeFi and RWA activity rather than cycling out after a short allocation window.
For now, the confirmed picture is clear: Aptos stablecoin capitalization has moved beyond $2 billion, annual reporting shows strong year-over-year growth, and the network is building deeper liquidity rails for tokenized finance. The next needed data point is a detailed issuer and flow breakdown showing where the capital is coming from and how it is being used.