The on-chain market for tokenized real-world assets (RWAs) reached a record valuation of $34 billion this May 2026, marking a significant milestone for the integration of traditional finance and blockchain technology. According to the latest data from RWA.xyz, this figure represents a tripling of the market since the start of 2025, when the sector sat at roughly $5.4 billion. The growth is fueled by institutional demand for U.S. Treasury products and Ethereum’s commanding position as the preferred settlement layer for digital securities.
The total RWA market, which excludes stablecoins, has grown nearly 20-fold over the last three years. In early 2023, the sector accounted for a mere $1.5 billion in value. This expansion accelerated rapidly after mid-2024, when the total value was still under $3 billion. Financial institutions have moved beyond the experimental “proof of concept” phase and are now deploying tokenized assets within live operational environments to capture higher yields and improve settlement speeds.
Ethereum continues to lead the sector, hosting approximately 60% of the total RWA value. This dominance equates to roughly $15.7 billion in assets settled on the network. The platform’s deep liquidity and established ERC-20 standard have made it the default choice for firms issuing tokenized bonds and private credit funds. Even as markets fluctuate, Ether enters rare accumulation phase as institutional players solidify their long-term infrastructure on the network.
Treasury products drive the surge in tokenized real-world assets
Tokenized U.S. Treasuries have emerged as the primary growth engine for the broader RWA ecosystem. These digital representations of government debt reached an estimated $16 billion in Assets Under Management (AUM) by May 2026. This is a staggering increase from the $380 million recorded in the first quarter of 2023. This 37-fold jump reflects a desire among crypto-native investors to earn low-risk yields without exiting the blockchain ecosystem.
The shift toward Treasuries gained momentum in early 2026. During the first two months of the year, tokenized Treasury market caps grew by $2.12 billion, actually outpacing the growth of stablecoins for the first time. Investors increasingly view these tokens as a more productive alternative to idle cash. By holding tokenized debt, they can maintain 24/7 liquidity while benefiting from the prevailing interest rates of the traditional money market.
Market share and blockchain distribution
While Ethereum remains the dominant player with a 52.9% market share in the Treasury segment, other networks are carving out specific niches. Stellar maintains a notable 35.8% dominance in the space, often favored for its low-cost transaction fees and built-in compliance features. However, the sheer volume of developer activity and security remains concentrated on the largest smart-contract platform.
And while the focus remains on institutional growth, individual participation is also rising. The number of unique on-chain addresses holding these assets surpassed 11,000 recently. This suggests that while whales and funds provide the bulk of the capital, the accessibility of these products is beginning to reach a more diverse range of sophisticated participants who are comfortable with digital custody.
Regulatory clarity and the impact of the GENIUS Act
Much of this institutional confidence stems from the passage of the GENIUS Act, which became effective in July 2025. This legislation provided a federal framework for payment stablecoins in the United States and mandated one-to-one reserve backing. By removing the “regulatory fog” that had previously stifled the industry, the Act encouraged major banks to launch their own tokenized products and settlement solutions.
The clear guidelines have allowed firms to satisfy compliance requirements while leveraging the efficiency of public blockchains. This has been particularly important for private credit, which has surpassed Treasuries in certain metrics to become the largest non-stablecoin RWA segment. Private credit accounted for approximately $14 billion of the total market as of April 2026, demonstrating that corporate debt is also being aggressively digitized.
This maturation coincides with a broader shift in how market participants view digital assets. Rather than purely speculative tools, tokens are now being judged by their ability to provide tangible financial utility. Many analysts believe crypto market window closes as utility shifts toward these productive, yield-bearing assets, leaving purely speculative tokens behind in the 2026 market cycle.
Commodities and equities join the tokenization trend
Beyond debt and credit, different asset classes are beginning to populate the on-chain registry. Commodities approached a value of $6 billion in May 2026, with tokenized gold leading the category at roughly $5 billion. These commodity-backed tokens have seen a 68% increase in value since 2024, providing a digital way to hedge against inflation with the security of a blockchain-verified physical asset.
Tokenized equities represent a smaller but growing portion of the market. As of May 25, 2026, the value of tokenized stocks reached $1.55 billion. While still in its infancy compared to the multi-trillion dollar traditional equity markets, the growth suggests that the movement toward 24-hour trading and instant settlement is gaining a foothold in the stock market as well.
The integration of these diverse assets indicates that the “tokenization of everything” is no longer a distant theory. As more real-world value moves onto the chain, the distinction between “crypto markets” and “financial markets” continues to blur. This transition is essential for the long-term viability of the industry, as utility provides the final proof for digital assets in an increasingly skeptical economic environment.
Outlook for the on-chain financial ecosystem
The trajectory of the RWA sector suggests that $34 billion is likely just a floor for the coming year. As financial institutions integrate these tokens into their daily back-office operations, the demand for high-throughput, secure settlement layers will only intensify. The maturation of institutional on-chain infrastructure is now the primary catalyst for market expansion, rather than retail speculation.
Future growth will likely depend on the further expansion of private credit and the potential for real estate tokenization, which remains a largely untapped market compared to liquid Treasuries. If the current rate of adoption continues, the RWA sector could become the dominant force within the DeFi ecosystem, providing the stability and predictable returns that the market has historically lacked. The focus has firmly shifted from building “walled gardens” to creating bridges between the legacy financial world and the digital future.
