- PYTH gained more than 25% over the past week, outperforming most large-cap altcoins.
- The Pyth Core upgrade on July 31 ends free, permissionless access to the network’s price feeds.
- All subscription revenue flows to the Pyth DAO, which funds monthly open-market token buybacks.
- Santiment ranks Pyth among the top three Solana ecosystem projects by development activity.
Pyth Network’s native token has climbed more than 25% over the past seven days, trading around $0.045 with a market capitalization of $355 million, according to CoinMarketCap data. The rally comes three weeks before the Pyth Core upgrade goes live on July 31, a structural overhaul that ends the network’s free price data model and replaces it with paid subscriptions whose revenue feeds directly into PYTH buybacks. he timing invites an obvious reading – traders positioning before the deadline – though the move also coincides with a broader altcoin rotation, so the upgrade cannot claim sole credit. What the pace does show is acceleration: 12% of the gain arrived in the past 24 hours alone.
The end of free data
Any developer has been able to pull Pyth’s price data free of charge since 2021, an arrangement that ends this month. According to the official Pyth Network blog, accessing any Price Feeds API after July 31 will require an active paid plan and an API key managed through the Pyth Terminal.
Pricing follows a tiered structure: the entry-level Starter Plan covers crypto prices, NAV data, redemption rates and indices, traditional asset classes sit in separate brackets, and institutions that want everything pay a flat monthly rate at the top of the scale.
| Plan | Coverage | Monthly price |
|---|---|---|
| Starter | Crypto, NAV, redemption rates, indices | $500 |
| Individual asset classes | US equities, futures or FX, per bracket | $2,500 – $6,500 |
| Full access | All asset classes | $10,000 |
The team stresses that API endpoints stay identical, so protocols built on Pyth since 2021 will not face broken integrations. The infrastructure serving those endpoints is another matter. Core feeds merge into the same scaling technology that powers Pyth Pro, which the project says reduces latency, improves price accuracy and expands symbol coverage well beyond the current catalog.
Three moving averages down, one barrier left
The 4-hour PYTH/USDT chart from TradingView, based on Binance data, shows the token cutting cleanly through its 50, 100 and 200-period simple moving averages during the latest leg up. Those averages now sit clustered between $0.0361 and $0.0389, well below the current price near $0.0452. When a price trades above all three of these lines, it usually signals that short, medium and longer-term momentum have aligned in the same direction, something PYTH has not managed since its early May local top above $0.062.

The same chart carries a warning for anyone entering at current levels. The Relative Strength Index, an indicator that measures how fast and how far a price has moved, briefly pushed above 80 before settling near 72. Readings above 70 typically describe an overbought market, meaning the asset has risen quickly enough that a pause or pullback becomes more likely in the short term. The candle that tagged $0.048 on July 7 already met sellers, and the price has since retreated about 2%.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Price | $0.04512 |
| 24h change | +12.01% |
| 7d change | +25.39% |
| Market cap | $355.35M |
| 50 / 100 / 200-period SMA | $0.0389 / $0.0369 / $0.0362 |
| RSI | 72 |
For traders watching levels, the former resistance band around $0.042, where the price stalled twice in early July, now acts as the first area of potential support. A deeper retracement would bring the moving average cluster near $0.038 back into focus. On the upside, $0.048 remains the barrier that rejected the latest push.
A buyback engine tied to real revenue
Every dollar of subscription revenue flows to the Pyth DAO. From there, the Pyth Reserve spends one third of its accumulated treasury balance each month on open-market PYTH purchases, creating a direct link between commercial adoption and buying pressure on the token.
The scale of what becomes billable is not trivial. The network entered 2026 with more than 2,850 active price feeds serving over 650 onchain applications, usage that until now generated no recurring revenue. If even a fraction of those integrations convert into paying subscribers, the DAO treasury grows, and with it the monthly buyback budget.
The supply side makes the rally more notable than the percentage alone suggests. On May 19, Pyth released roughly 2.13 billion tokens from vesting, an unlock worth around $92 million that expanded the circulating supply by more than a third, according to data from Tokenomist. Cliffs of that size usually cap price action for months while the market digests the new float. PYTH instead spent seven weeks basing near its yearly lows and is now climbing into the upgrade with that overhang already behind it.
Some rough arithmetic shows what is at stake. If just 200 of those 650 integrations take the $500 Starter Plan, that is $1.2 million in annual recurring revenue reaching the DAO – modest against PYTH’s $355 million market cap, but recurring. The bull case requires institutional brackets: fifty clients on full access would mean $6 million a year, and a third of the growing treasury converting into monthly market buys. Neither scenario is confirmed, and that is precisely why the first revenue disclosure matters more than the upgrade date itself.
The upgrade also retires older parts of the network. Pyth is deprecating its original Pythnet appchain and winding down Oracle Integrity Staking emissions as data delivery migrates to the newer Pyth Lazer pipeline. Fewer emissions combined with recurring buybacks tilt the token’s supply dynamics toward scarcity, provided the subscription business actually generates meaningful revenue. That remains the open question, and the Core tier has no revenue history yet to test it against – the only disclosed figures so far come from Pyth Pro’s institutional side, which crossed $1 million in annual recurring revenue with a few dozen subscribers.
A hard deadline for builders
Teams running infrastructure on Pyth face a hard deadline. Anyone using the standalone Price Pusher to manage on-chain updates must upgrade to version 10.5.0 or later and attach a Hermes access token obtained through the Pyth Terminal, otherwise automated price updates will start failing on July 31, according to the network’s developer documentation. The DAO will handle major contract switches automatically, but new integrations should fetch the updated contract addresses from the Pyth Developer Hub rather than relying on legacy references.
Development data gives the rally support that is independent of the upgrade itself. Santiment Intelligence placed Pyth third among all Solana ecosystem projects by development activity in its latest monthly ranking, behind only Chainlink and Solana itself, based on enhanced GitHub event data. Sustained developer output during a commercial pivot is not a given, and Pyth holding that position suggests the engineering side is keeping pace with the business restructuring.
Broader market rotation is working in the token’s favor too: CoinMarketCap’s Altcoin Season Index has climbed to 49, and capital moving into mid-cap tokens has lifted several oracle and infrastructure names this week. The next real test comes after July 31, when the first subscription figures will show whether the buyback program has meaningful funding behind it or whether the market front-ran a mechanism that still needs paying customers.



















































