
SOLUSD is the ticker symbol for the price of SOL quoted in US dollars. SOL is the native cryptocurrency of Solana, a high-performance Layer 1 blockchain built to run decentralised applications quickly and at low cost. Solana operates as a decentralised computing platform, and SOL is the token that powers activity across its network. The pair tracks the live price of one SOL against the dollar.
SOLUSD prices are driven by 4 main factors: overall crypto market sentiment, network adoption, technical developments, and macroeconomic conditions. Sentiment across the wider crypto market sets the direction most of the time, and because Solana tends to move with Bitcoin, a sharp move in Bitcoin usually pulls SOL with it. Growing adoption of applications built on Solana raises demand for SOL and supports the price, while changes to the protocol or its network performance can shift confidence in either direction. Macro conditions such as interest rates and risk appetite then determine how much capital flows into crypto as a whole.
The SOLUSD price is calculated by quoting the value of one SOL token in US dollars (USD). The figure reflects the latest price at which SOL changes hands against the dollar, drawn from across exchanges and combined into a single bid and ask. When demand for SOL rises relative to the dollar the price climbs, and when token demand fades or the dollar strengthens it falls.
SOLUSD trading works by opening a leveraged position on the price of SOL against the US dollar, without owning the underlying token. Your result depends on whether you correctly predict the direction of the price.
Positions are settled in cash, so you can take either side of the market and close out the same day to act on intraday price moves.
The main benefit of trading SOLUSD is direct, two-directional exposure to one of the more volatile crypto assets through leverage, with no token to own or safeguard. Going long or short lets you aim to profit whether SOL rises or falls, and trading on margin means a smaller amount of capital controls a larger position. You also skip the need for a crypto wallet or private keys, because the trade never delivers SOL to you.
The main risk of trading SOLUSD is sharp volatility made larger by leverage. SOL can swing quickly on crypto market sentiment, Bitcoin's moves, and news about the Solana network, and one adverse move can wipe out all or part of your invested capital. Leverage works in both directions: a small move against you can drain your margin fast and force a margin call. The pair also trades through the week and overnight, so the price can shift while your position is unattended. A common risk management rule is to risk no more than 1% of your total trading capital on a single trade.
SOLUSD trades almost around the clock from Monday through the weekend, with only a brief daily break and a short pause on Sunday, so you rarely have to wait for a session to open. Volume and volatility tend to peak when the major financial markets are running, especially across the European and US sessions from around 08:00 to 21:00 UTC, when spreads are usually at their tightest.
Because SOL moves closely with Bitcoin, large moves in Bitcoin and crypto-wide news can drive SOLUSD at any hour, alongside updates tied to the Solana network itself. Trading in the busier, higher-liquidity windows generally means tighter spreads, quicker execution, and less slippage than the quiet overnight stretch.
You can start trading SOLUSD directly from this page. The live chart above shows the current SOL-dollar price, and the Trade Now button prompts you to open a trading account.
To place your first SOLUSD trade on TMGM, follow these five steps:
TMGM quotes a bid and ask price for SOLUSD. The gap between the two is the spread, which is deducted from your position at entry. Track your open trade against the live chart and move your stop-loss as the price develops.
The minimum deposit to start trading SOLUSD on TMGM is $100. How much you need beyond that comes down to your position size and margin requirement.
SOLUSD margin is calculated as your volume in lots multiplied by the contract size (100 SOL) and the current SOL price, divided by the leverage ratio. For example, a 1-lot position (100 SOL) when SOL trades at $150 has a position value of $15,000, and at the fixed 1:20 leverage the required margin is $750. A larger position raises the margin needed to open and hold the trade.
Your trading capital should also cover the entry spread and leave enough free margin to absorb price swings without triggering a margin call. Risking no more than 1% of your account balance per trade leaves room to manage positions and ride out short-term moves against you.
Start trading SOLUSD with TMGM today.
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