Live SOL-USD rate from Phemex spot, with USD-USD foreign-exchange from a daily-refreshed reference rate. The US dollar is the deepest fiat market for crypto on every major exchange.
Pre-calculated at the live rate of 1 SOL = $84.31 USD.
SOL-USD is the third-most-liquid crypto fiat pair on most major US exchanges, after BTC and ETH. Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini, and Binance.US all support spot SOL-USD with deep order books — typically a few basis points wider than the equivalent BTC-USD pair, but well within the cost tolerance of retail-sized trading. Solana's high-throughput chain (thousands of transactions per second at sub-cent fees) has positioned SOL as the dominant network for memecoin trading, fast NFT mints, and a growing share of stablecoin transfers, all of which translate into US retail demand for the underlying token.
Solana is a high-throughput blockchain that's become the dominant network for fast, cheap on-chain trading and a meaningful share of stablecoin transfers. SOL-fiat pairs are liquid on the larger exchanges but spreads can be a few basis points wider than BTC's on the same venue. The chain processes thousands of transactions per second at sub-cent fees — a structural difference from ETH that's reflected in the kind of activity SOL holders typically use it for (memecoins, perpetuals, NFT mints).
The US dollar has been issued since 1792 and became the world's anchor reserve currency under the 1944 Bretton Woods agreement. The dollar's link to gold ended in 1971 — since then it's been a pure fiat currency backed by the credibility of the Federal Reserve and the size of the US economy. The Federal Reserve sets short-term interest rates, which influences the value of every other currency in the world relative to USD. Roughly 60% of central-bank foreign reserves globally are still held in dollars.
Used in: United States, Ecuador, El Salvador, Panama (alongside the balboa), Zimbabwe, and several smaller dollarised economies. The dollar is also the world's primary reserve currency and the unit of account for most international commodity trading.
The US dollar is the deepest fiat market for crypto on every major exchange. BTC-USD, ETH-USD, SOL-USD, and XRP-USD pairs trade 24/7 with tight spreads measured in single basis points on the largest venues. Most other crypto-fiat pairs in the world price through this one — the BTC-EUR rate, for example, is effectively the BTC-USD rate adjusted by the EUR-USD foreign-exchange rate, which is why USD pairs tend to lead price discovery and the rest follow with a lag of seconds.
US-resident traders have access to Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini for spot, plus Binance.US, Crypto.com, and a handful of regulated derivatives venues for perpetuals. Tax treatment is the simple part: the IRS classifies crypto as property, so every conversion to USD (or to another crypto) is a taxable event. Short-term gains (under one year held) are taxed as ordinary income; long-term gains (over one year) are taxed at the lower capital-gains brackets. Form 8949 reports each disposition. KYC is enforced on every regulated venue — a US driver's licence and a selfie are typical. Bank rails are ACH (free, 1-3 days), wire (fee, same day), and instant on-ramps via debit card (1-3% fee). The on-ramp friction is low; the tax-tracking discipline is the real overhead.
The US has a paradoxical relationship with crypto: it hosts most of the largest exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini), the most institutional capital, and the deepest derivatives markets — and also the most aggressive enforcement environment for ambiguous tokens. The SEC's 2020-2023 case against Ripple shaped a generation of compliance norms; the 2024 spot Bitcoin ETF approvals (BlackRock IBIT, Fidelity FBTC, ARK ARKB and others) brought trillion-dollar asset managers into the space. Retail adoption sits around 15-20% of adults. Cultural attitude varies sharply by region: tech-coast holders treat crypto as portfolio diversification, while substantial pockets in Texas and Florida lean toward Bitcoin-as-monetary-protest. Tax-tracking discipline is the dominant pain point — the IRS expects every disposal reported, even crypto-to-crypto swaps, and most retail underreport without realising it.
1 SOL is worth $84.31 USD at the current spot rate. The rate updates every minute against the Phemex price feed and the USD-USD foreign-exchange rate refreshes hourly from a public reference source. Prices on individual exchanges differ by a few basis points owing to spread and venue-specific liquidity, but the spot rate above is a reliable reference point.
Yes, holding and trading Solana are legal in United States. The US has a paradoxical relationship with crypto: it hosts most of the largest exchanges (Coinbase, Kraken, Gemini), the most institutional capital, and the deepest derivatives markets — and also the most aggressive enforcement environment for ambiguous tokens. See the regional context block above for the full picture on tax treatment, exchange access, and any restrictions on using SOL as a means of payment.
The exchange landscape for SOL-USD in United States is summarised in detail in the section above. US-resident traders have access to Coinbase, Kraken, and Gemini for spot, plus Binance.US, Crypto.com, and a handful of regulated derivatives venues for perpetuals. Use the converter widget above to size your purchase against the current rate before opening the exchange.