If you've been active on Solana for more than a few weeks, your financial picture gets complicated fast. You've got SOL staked with a validator, some JitoSOL sitting in a lending protocol, LP positions on Raydium and Meteora, a handful of memecoins across two wallets, and maybe a few NFTs you bought months ago. Trying to figure out your actual net worth by checking each protocol individually is a nightmare.
Portfolio trackers solve this by pulling all your on-chain positions into a single dashboard. But not all trackers are built the same. Some nail Solana DeFi coverage but ignore other chains. Others support 50 chains but barely scratch the surface on Solana protocols.
We've tested the major options to help you pick the right one for how you actually use Solana.
Why You Need a Portfolio Tracker
Before diving into the comparison, here's what a solid portfolio tracker should handle:
- Multiple wallets: Most active users have at least two or three wallets. A tracker should aggregate them into one view.
- DeFi positions: Staked tokens, LP positions, lending deposits, and leveraged positions should show accurate real-time values — not just the underlying token balance.
- LP token breakdown: Seeing "$500 in an LP" is useless without knowing the token split, impermanent loss, and accrued fees.
- Staking rewards: JitoSOL, mSOL, bSOL, and other liquid staking tokens need to reflect their actual SOL value, not just the token count.
- Transaction history: A chronological view of swaps, deposits, withdrawals, and claims helps with tracking PnL and preparing for taxes.
- Token price accuracy: New and low-liquidity tokens need to pull prices from the right sources. If your tracker shows a memecoin at its all-time-high price when it's already dumped 95%, the numbers mean nothing.
No single tracker does all of this perfectly. Here's how the top options stack up.
Step Finance is the original Solana portfolio dashboard, and it remains the most Solana-focused option available. It was built specifically for the Solana ecosystem and has been iterating on DeFi position tracking since 2021.
What It Does Well
Deep Solana DeFi integration. Step Finance connects to a wide range of Solana protocols including Marinade, Raydium, Orca, Jupiter, Drift, Mango, and Meteora. It breaks down LP positions into their underlying tokens and shows staking rewards with real APY data. For anyone heavily involved in Solana DeFi, this level of protocol coverage is hard to beat.
Transaction history. Step provides a detailed transaction history view that categorizes your activity by type (swaps, stakes, LP deposits, etc.). This is genuinely useful for tracking where your money went over a given period, though it's not a replacement for dedicated tax software.
Swap aggregation. Step integrates Jupiter's swap aggregator directly into the dashboard, so you can rebalance positions without leaving the app. It's a small convenience, but it adds up when you're managing multiple positions daily.
STEP token utility. Holding the STEP token unlocks premium analytics features. The token model gives the project a sustainable revenue source beyond just ads, which matters for long-term reliability.
Limitations
- Solana only. If you hold assets on Ethereum, Arbitrum, or Base, Step Finance won't see them. It's strictly a Solana tool.
- New protocol lag. When a new DeFi protocol launches on Solana, it can take weeks or months before Step Finance adds support. If you're farming on the newest protocols, your positions might show as raw token balances rather than properly parsed DeFi positions.
- Mobile experience. Step Finance is primarily a web app. The mobile experience works but feels like an afterthought compared to dedicated mobile-first trackers.
- NFT support is basic. It'll display your NFTs and their floor prices, but don't expect deep collection analytics.
Best For
Users who are all-in on Solana DeFi and want the most detailed breakdown of their staking, LP, and lending positions across established Solana protocols. New to the dashboard? Our complete guide to using Step Finance walks through connecting wallets, reading DeFi positions, and the STEP token perks.
Sonar Watch
Sonar Watch takes a slightly different approach. It's a portfolio aggregator that focuses on breadth of protocol coverage, including strong NFT tracking alongside DeFi positions.
What It Does Well
Protocol coverage. Sonar Watch supports an impressive number of Solana protocols. From mainstream platforms like Jupiter and Raydium to smaller ones like Tulip, Francium, and Solend, it parses positions across the ecosystem. The team is active about adding new protocols as they gain traction.
NFT portfolio tracking. Where Step Finance treats NFTs as an afterthought, Sonar Watch gives them proper attention. It pulls floor prices from major marketplaces, shows your collection value, and tracks NFT-related DeFi positions (like NFT-collateralized loans).
Clean interface. The dashboard is well-organized and doesn't overwhelm you with data. Positions are grouped by protocol with clear labels, making it easy to scan your portfolio at a glance.
API access. Sonar Watch offers an API that developers can use to build custom portfolio tracking. If you're building a tool that needs to fetch wallet positions, their API is a solid option.
Limitations
- Solana-focused. Like Step Finance, Sonar Watch is primarily a Solana tracker. Multi-chain support is limited.
- Price accuracy on low-cap tokens. Very new or low-liquidity tokens sometimes show stale or incorrect prices. This is a common issue across all trackers, but it's worth noting.
- No built-in swap. Unlike Step Finance, you can't execute trades directly from the Sonar Watch dashboard.
- Less community traction. Sonar Watch has a smaller user base than Step Finance or DeBank, which means less community feedback driving improvements.
Best For
Solana users who hold a mix of DeFi positions and NFTs, and want both tracked accurately in one dashboard.
DeBank
DeBank is the multi-chain portfolio tracker that most DeFi users across all ecosystems have heard of. It added Solana support and has been expanding its coverage of Solana protocols steadily.
What It Does Well
Multi-chain aggregation. DeBank's killer feature is tracking your portfolio across Ethereum, Solana, Arbitrum, Base, Polygon, BSC, Avalanche, and dozens of other chains simultaneously. If you're active across multiple ecosystems, this is the only option that shows your complete picture in one place.
Social features. DeBank has built a social layer where you can follow other wallets, see what whales are buying, and browse curated portfolios. It's like a social network for on-chain activity. The Web3 ID system lets you create a profile tied to your wallet.
Protocol tracking breadth. DeBank tracks over 1,500 protocols across all supported chains. On Solana specifically, it covers major DeFi protocols like Jupiter, Raydium, Marinade, and Drift.
Approval management. DeBank shows your token approvals across chains and lets you revoke them. This is a genuine security feature that Solana-only trackers typically don't offer (though Solana's token approval model is different from EVM chains).
Limitations
- Solana DeFi depth is weaker. DeBank's Solana coverage, while growing, doesn't match Step Finance or Sonar Watch for parsing complex Solana-specific DeFi positions. Some Solana LP positions may show as raw token balances instead of properly broken-down positions.
- Slower to add new Solana protocols. DeBank's priority is typically EVM chains. New Solana protocols may take longer to get integrated compared to the Solana-native trackers.
- Premium features are paywalled. DeBank Pro ($0 for basic, paid for advanced analytics) locks some of the more detailed portfolio analysis behind a subscription.
- Can feel EVM-centric. The UI and feature set clearly evolved from EVM tracking. Solana sometimes feels like an add-on rather than a first-class citizen.
Best For
Users who hold assets across multiple chains and want a single dashboard for everything, even if the Solana-specific DeFi parsing isn't as granular as dedicated Solana trackers.