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SOL-WBTC Pool: Raydium vs Orca vs Meteora

Choosing a SOL-WBTC pool comes down to fee tier, liquidity depth (TVL), and AMM design. Higher fees can lift fee APR in volatile conditions, while deeper pools often mean lower slippage and potentially steadier volume-driven fees.

Compare how much yield comes from trading fees versus external rewards. Fee APR depends on volume in your active price range (for concentrated pools); rewards can boost returns but may be time-limited or require compounding.

Concentrated liquidity (e.g., Whirlpools/CLMM/DLMM) can maximize fee capture if SOL and WBTC trade within your range, but needs monitoring to avoid going out of range. Standard pools are simpler with broader exposure and typically lower capital efficiency; IL remains a key risk for this volatile pair.

SOL-WBTC pools across DEXs

ProtocolPoolTVL24h VolAPR
Orca WhirlpoolSOL-WBTC$5.32M$19.33M66%
Orca WhirlpoolSOL-WBTC$159.61K$16.42K11%
Raydium CLMMSOL-WBTC$81.26K$26.16K6%
Orca WhirlpoolSOL-WBTC$41.55K$5.15K45%
raydium-ammSOL-WBTC$5.69K$3.32K53%
meteora-dlmmWBTC-SOL$0$018%

Frequently asked questions

How do fee tiers affect SOL-WBTC pool returns?

Higher tiers collect more per trade but may reduce flow; lower tiers can attract volume. Net fees hinge on actual volume (and price staying in range for CL pools).

When should I choose concentrated vs standard liquidity?

Use concentrated liquidity if you can manage ranges and want higher capital efficiency; choose standard for lower maintenance and broader exposure. Wider ranges trade off fees for less rebalancing.

What else matters beyond headline APR?

Check liquidity depth, fee vs reward mix, incentive duration, compounding, IL risk, and rebalancing tools. Also consider protocol and custody risks.

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