Solana trades at $87.44 on May 6, 2026 — exactly 25 months after the April 2024 Bitcoin halving and 70% below its January 2025 cycle high of $295.83. That timing matters more than most analysts admit. Historically, altcoins peak 12 to 18 months after a halving and then correct for the next 12 to 24 months. SOL is now in that second phase, and the charts are telling you exactly where this cycle stands.
The post-halving narrative usually gets sold as “altcoin season is coming.” However, the data tells a more nuanced story. SOL ran 36x from its $8 cycle low in late 2022 to its $295 peak — a textbook post-halving expansion. Now the chart is in the cooldown phase, and pretending otherwise is how investors get hurt. This article walks through what the halving cycle actually predicts for SOL from here, with specific levels, real on-chain data, and an honest verdict.
Where SOL Sits in the Halving Cycle Right Now
SOL holds the #7 spot on CoinGecko and CoinMarketCap with a $50.45 billion market cap. Twenty-four-hour trading volume runs around $5.67 billion. Circulating supply is 576.46 million SOL out of a 624 million total, with annual inflation gradually stepping down toward the 1.5% long-term floor.
The cycle math is critical. Bitcoin halvings have historically delivered altcoin peaks roughly 12–18 months after the halving date. The April 2024 halving fits that pattern: SOL peaked in January 2025, nine months after halving. By contrast, post-peak corrections have averaged 75–80% in prior cycles (2017–2018 and 2021–2022). Therefore, SOL’s current 70% drawdown from $295 to $87 is mathematically in the normal range — not a bottom signal yet, not a catastrophe either.
Critical levels to watch right now: support stacks at $83, $79, and $75. Resistance lives at $97, then $110–$120, with the psychologically important $150 zone above that. Whoever wins the $79–$97 range over the next quarter sets the tone for the rest of 2026.
What the Charts Say: Multi-Timeframe Read
The technical picture is mixed across timeframes — which is exactly what late post-halving consolidation looks like. The 14-day RSI on the daily chart sits between 41 and 47, neutral but leaning weak. Meanwhile, the weekly RSI dropped to 29.7, technically oversold. Oversold weekly readings often precede relief rallies, but they can persist longer than traders expect during real downtrends.
Moving averages tell a clearly bearish near-term story. The 50-day SMA sits at $85.72 with price hovering just below it. The 200-day SMA looms higher at roughly $118.65, meaning SOL needs a 36% rally just to reclaim its long-term trend. A “death cross” — the 50-day moving below the 200-day — printed earlier in 2026 and hasn’t reversed. Until it does, treat rallies as countertrend bounces, not confirmed reversals.
One chart pattern stands out: a falling wedge on the weekly timeframe between roughly $75 and $150. Falling wedges are usually bullish reversal patterns — the converging trendlines suggest selling pressure is exhausting itself. However, confirmation requires a decisive weekly close above $97, then $110, before the pattern actually plays out. Without that close, the wedge could break the other way and target $67 quickly.
Michael Walters, Senior Crypto Analyst at Solana Price Prediction, frames the setup directly: “The halving cycle isn’t broken — SOL is just in the part of it nobody enjoys. The chart is asking patience, not heroics. Buy the wedge breakout above $97, not the hope of a V-bottom.”
Halving Cycle Math: What History Actually Predicts
SOL has lived through two complete Bitcoin halving cycles. The 2020 halving saw SOL go from sub-$1 in early 2021 to $260 in November 2021 — a roughly 350x move from its launch price. The 2024 halving saw SOL go from $8 in late 2022 to $295 by January 2025 — a 36x move. By contrast, the post-peak corrections have been brutal: 96% from the 2021 high to the 2022 low, and a still-active 70% drawdown from the 2025 high to current levels.
The pattern across both cycles: roughly 9–14 months of explosive post-halving rally, followed by 18–30 months of correction and accumulation, then the next halving cycle begins. The next Bitcoin halving is scheduled for April 2028. Therefore, if history rhymes, SOL bottoms somewhere between Q3 2026 and Q1 2027, then begins a slow accumulation phase before the next expansion in late 2028 and 2029.
That timeline is uncomfortable for traders looking for a quick bounce. Ultimately, it’s also the most realistic read of where SOL is in its halving cycle right now.
Fundamentals Are Stronger Than the Chart
Beneath the price action, Solana’s fundamentals had one of their busiest weeks of the year. Visa added Solana to its multi-chain stablecoin settlement network on May 3, 2026, alongside eight other blockchains. Visa’s annualized stablecoin settlement volume hit $7 billion, up 50% quarter-over-quarter. Two days earlier, Circle minted $750 million USDC on Solana in a single transaction, lifting network stablecoin supply by 20%. Total stablecoin supply on Solana now sits near $17 billion, with real-world asset value above $1.85 billion (CoinMarketCap).
Furthermore, the protocol roadmap is moving. Co-founder Anatoly Yakovenko confirmed at Consensus Miami that the Alpenglow consensus upgrade could ship as early as Q3 2026, slashing block finality from roughly 12 seconds to ~150 milliseconds. Firedancer 1.0 — Jump Crypto’s independent validator client — has begun production deployment, materially reducing the single-implementation outage risk that haunted SOL through 2022.
However, on-chain metrics paint a more complicated picture. Daily active addresses cooled to a 12-month low of about 3.3 million. Weekly active addresses dropped from 5.01 million in February to 2.89 million — a 42% decline (Santiment). Memecoin trading on Pump.fun is well off its peak. That said, whale accumulation was a top trend in early 2026, and Solana added over 11,500 new developers in 2025, ranking second only to Ethereum.
By contrast, Ethereum’s $310 billion market cap still dwarfs SOL’s $50 billion — but Solana settles transactions in under a second for less than a cent, while Ethereum L1 still charges several dollars during congestion. The fundamental moat is widening even as the chart isn’t.
Solana Price Targets Through the Halving Cycle
| Timeframe | Bear Case | Base Case | Bull Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| Short-term (1–3 months) | $67 | $85–$110 | $125 |
| Mid-term (6–12 months) | $75 | $130 | $185 |
| Long-term (2026–2027) | $90 | $220 | $340 |
Short-term (May–August 2026): The $79–$97 range likely resolves within this window. A confirmed break of $79 sends SOL to the $67–$75 zone. Reclaiming $97 with volume opens $110–$125. Base case: choppy range trade between $85 and $110.
Mid-term (late 2026): The Alpenglow upgrade plus a potential Fed pivot are the two biggest catalysts. If both land, $185 is realistic. Without them, SOL likely grinds toward $130 by year-end as the post-halving cycle works through its correction phase.
Long-term (2026–2027): The bull case of $340 assumes ETF inflows reaccelerate, Alpenglow ships successfully, and macro turns risk-on heading into the 2028 pre-halving accumulation phase. The bear case of $90 assumes ETF demand keeps fading, FTX estate unlocks continue weighing on supply, and a recession compresses risk assets.
Risks That Could Break the Halving Cycle Thesis
Three risks deserve real weight. First, FTX bankruptcy estate unlocks. The estate still holds tens of millions of SOL, and each scheduled distribution has historically triggered double-digit corrections. Therefore, every unlock is a known supply shock that any bullish read of the chart has to absorb.
Second, ETF inflow erosion. Spot Solana ETFs launched in October 2025 and crossed $1 billion in combined assets quickly. However, monthly inflows have collapsed for six consecutive months to just $39.93 million in April 2026. If that trend continues, the structural bid that justified the post-halving bull thesis weakens significantly. Third, network reliability. Solana hasn’t had a major outage in over a year, but one significant incident reprices institutional risk overnight. Firedancer reduces this risk meaningfully but doesn’t eliminate it.
Macro risk applies to all crypto. Given SOL’s 1.5x beta to Bitcoin, a 20% BTC drawdown plausibly translates to a 30–35% SOL drawdown — which would push price toward $55–$60 and extend the post-halving correction by another quarter or two.
Verdict: This Is the Patience Phase, Not the Panic Phase
SOL is in the boring middle of the halving cycle — past the explosive post-halving rally, deep into the correction phase, but not yet at the next accumulation low. Anyone expecting a V-shaped recovery to $200+ in 2026 is fighting both the chart and historical halving precedent. By contrast, anyone calling SOL “dead” is ignoring that fundamentals are stronger than they’ve ever been and that the current drawdown is mathematically normal for this stage of the cycle.
The honest read: SOL is a hold with conviction for long-term investors, a patient buy below $80 for traders, and a probable 1.5x to 4x return through 2027 — not a 5-bagger waiting around the corner. The next major upside catalyst is Alpenglow shipping in Q3/Q4 2026. Until then, treat rallies as bounces and accumulate during weakness if your time horizon stretches past the next halving in 2028.
Frequently Asked Questions
Has the post-halving rally for Solana already happened?
Yes. The April 2024 halving’s bull run for SOL peaked in January 2025 at $295.83, roughly nine months later. The current price action is the post-peak correction phase, which historically lasts 18–30 months.
When will SOL bottom in this halving cycle?
Historical patterns suggest a bottom somewhere between Q3 2026 and Q1 2027. Specific levels to watch are $75 (current support stack) and $67 (deeper bear case). A close below $67 opens the door to a final flush before accumulation begins.
Will the next halving in 2028 push SOL to new all-time highs?
Likely yes, based on the pattern of two prior cycles. However, the magnitude depends on Alpenglow execution, ETF flows reaccelerating, and macro conditions. A range of $400–$700 by late 2028 or 2029 is consistent with prior cycle behavior, but those numbers require multiple things going right.
Should I buy SOL now or wait for a deeper drop?
At $87, SOL is roughly 70% below its all-time high — a normal accumulation zone for patient investors. Short-term traders should wait for either a confirmed weekly close above $97 (bullish breakout) or a flush to $67–$75 (capitulation entry). Long-term holders with multi-cycle horizons can accumulate at current levels with reasonable risk-reward.
What’s the single most important chart level to watch?
$97 on a weekly close. That level invalidates the bear flag pattern, confirms the falling wedge breakout, and signals the correction phase may be ending. Below $79, the bearish thesis remains in control regardless of fundamentals.
About the Author
Michael Walters is a Senior Crypto Analyst at Solana Price Prediction with over a decade covering Layer-1 protocols, halving cycle analysis, and on-chain metrics. His research focuses on translating cycle data and technical structure into actionable forecasts for both retail and institutional readers.
Disclaimer
This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or trading advice. Cryptocurrency markets are highly volatile and you can lose your entire investment. Always do your own research and consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.
Data Sources
CoinGecko – SOL price, market cap, ranking, all-time high data
CoinMarketCap – Trading volume, stablecoin supply, RWA metrics
TradingView – Multi-timeframe technical analysis, falling wedge pattern
Santiment – Active address and whale accumulation data
TipRanks – Moving average and RSI snapshot
CoinDesk – Alpenglow upgrade and Yakovenko interviews
Crypto Briefing – Visa, Circle, Firedancer news coverage
DefiLlama – Cross-cycle TVL and DeFi data
Blockworks – Halving cycle analysis and historical SOL data
Yahoo Finance – ETF inflow data