Solana has emerged as one of March 2026’s most dynamic cryptocurrencies. Following weeks of consolidation between $77 and $92, the asset surged to a one-month peak of $97 on March 13 before experiencing a modest retracement. Currently trading around $89–$90, SOL is testing a critical support level that has proven resilient since late February.
Solana (SOL) Price
The SuperTrend momentum indicator has transitioned from bearish to bullish on the daily timeframe—the first such reversal since January. Technical analyst Ali Martinez identified a significant accumulation zone between $85.55 and $82.60, where approximately 76 million SOL tokens were acquired over a 38-day period. Martinez noted that “the resistance overhead is less substantial than the support structure below,” suggesting Solana has an “unobstructed trajectory toward $100, with $115 as a secondary target.”
On the daily chart, SOL is navigating between its 20-day exponential moving average at $88.78 and the Bollinger Band centerline at $95.11. A confirmed break below $88.78 would represent the initial technical warning that March’s upward momentum may be losing steam.
The most significant development for Solana this week transcended price action. On March 17, the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission released joint regulatory guidance designating 16 cryptocurrencies as digital commodities. Solana secured a spot on this list alongside industry leaders Bitcoin and Ethereum.
The comprehensive 68-page framework establishes five distinct classifications for crypto assets under federal securities regulations. Digital commodities are now formally defined as assets whose value stems from operational blockchain utility and market supply-demand mechanics, rather than dependence on centralized management initiatives.
This regulatory clarification also legitimizes staking operations, wrapped token variants, and exchange-traded fund proposals for assets designated as digital commodities. Financial institutions can now provide staking infrastructure and custodial services for SOL without navigating securities registration requirements.
SOL spot exchange-traded funds had maintained a five-week consecutive inflow streak entering this week. On March 17, institutional demand peaked at $17.81 million in daily net inflows—the strongest performance since early March.
Source: Farside
On March 18, that momentum paused. VanEck’s VSOL fund registered $295,730 in withdrawals, representing the only fund activity that day. Despite this reversal, aggregate net inflows across all Solana ETFs remain at $989 million, approaching the symbolic $1 billion threshold.
Open interest contracted 6.77% to $5.28 billion on March 18, even as options trading volume exploded 95.70% to $16 million. The dramatic increase in options activity indicates traders are implementing protective strategies rather than establishing new directional bets.
Leverage-driven long positions absorbed $13.92 million in liquidations during a 24-hour window, significantly outpacing the $2.27 million in short liquidations. SOL is presently valued at $89.93, maintaining its position above the critical $88 support threshold.
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