Most portfolio trackers make you choose: deep coverage on one chain, or shallow coverage across many. CoinStats is one of the few that genuinely tries to do both — 120+ blockchains, 300+ exchange and wallet integrations, and auto-detected DeFi positions across 10,000+ protocols, all funneled into a single dashboard.
That scope is the pitch. The question for Solana users is whether CoinStats actually delivers useful Solana DeFi tracking, or whether "120+ chains" means spreading coverage so thin that your Raydium LP positions show up as a mystery token balance.
This review covers what CoinStats does well, where it falls short on Solana specifically, and whether the paid tiers and API product justify the price.
What CoinStats Actually Does
CoinStats is a portfolio management app available on iOS, Android, and web. You connect wallets and centralized exchanges, and CoinStats aggregates everything into a unified view: token holdings, DeFi positions, NFTs, transaction history, and PnL analytics.
The core value proposition is unification. If you hold SOL in Phantom, ETH on a Ledger, BTC on Coinbase, and some stablecoins on Binance, CoinStats shows your total portfolio value in one place. You do not need to check four different apps to know your net worth.
Key capabilities:
- Wallet tracking across 120+ chains (Solana, Ethereum, Bitcoin, Arbitrum, Base, Polygon, BSC, Avalanche, and dozens more)
- Exchange connections to 200+ CEXs via read-only API keys (Binance, Coinbase, Kraken, OKX, Bybit, and others)
- DeFi auto-detection for staking, lending, and LP positions across 10,000+ protocols on 50+ chains
- NFT tracking with collection values and market alerts
- Transaction history with categorized entries (swaps, sends, receives, claims)
- Portfolio analytics including allocation breakdowns, performance charts, profit/loss, fees paid, and a "time machine" view of historical portfolio state
- In-app swaps that aggregate across liquidity sources
- Custom alerts for price movements and portfolio changes
Founded in 2017, CoinStats has grown to over 1.2 million monthly active users. That longevity matters — portfolio trackers that disappear take your tracking history with them.
Solana Support: What Works
CoinStats supports Solana wallet connections through Phantom, OKX Wallet, Trust Wallet, and direct address input. Once connected, it pulls in your SPL token holdings with real-time prices, transaction history, and NFT collections.
For basic portfolio tracking — knowing what tokens you hold, their current value, and your overall Solana allocation relative to other chains — CoinStats works well. Token prices are generally accurate for anything with reasonable liquidity, and the multi-wallet aggregation means you can connect three or four Solana wallets alongside your EVM wallets and see everything in one view.
DeFi position detection on Solana covers the major protocols. Staking positions (native SOL staking, JitoSOL, mSOL, bSOL) are recognized and valued correctly. Large lending and LP positions on established protocols like Raydium and Marinade are generally detected.
The Solana-specific transaction explorer lets you search and view transaction history for any Solana wallet address, which is useful for auditing unfamiliar wallets before connecting.
Where Solana Coverage Falls Short
This is where the cross-chain trade-off shows up. CoinStats tracks 10,000+ DeFi protocols, but only a fraction of those are on Solana. The Solana DeFi parsing is not as deep as what you get from Solana-native tools like Step Finance or SonarWatch.
Specific weak spots:
- Newer Solana protocols take longer to get integrated. If you are farming on a protocol that launched in the past few months, CoinStats likely does not parse those positions yet. They show up as raw token balances instead of properly labeled DeFi positions with APY data.
- Concentrated liquidity positions (Meteora DLMM, Orca Whirlpools) are harder to value accurately. The position might appear, but the breakdown of underlying tokens and impermanent loss calculations may be approximate or missing.
- LP fee accrual is not always surfaced for Solana positions. You might see your LP value but not the fees you have earned, which matters for assessing whether a position is profitable.
- Protocol-specific nuances like Drift leveraged positions, Kamino vaults, or Jupiter DCA orders may not display with full context. CoinStats handles the EVM DeFi landscape (Aave, Compound, Uniswap, Curve) with more granularity than the Solana equivalent.
If Solana DeFi is your primary activity, CoinStats is best used as your cross-chain overview dashboard, with a Solana-native tracker for protocol-level detail.
Pricing: Free vs Premium vs Degen
CoinStats offers three consumer tiers plus a Team plan for organizations.
Free — No cost. 10 portfolios, 20,000 transactions, 10 syncs per day per portfolio. Includes portfolio analytics, PnL, asset allocation, wallet analysis, transaction notifications, custom alerts, and an ad-free experience. The free tier is genuinely usable for casual portfolio tracking.
Premium — $13.99/month (yearly billing saves 13%). 100 portfolios, priority support under 24 hours, and access to the multimodal AI agent and AI deep research features. This tier makes sense when the sync limits and transaction counts on the free plan become a real constraint.
Degen — Yearly billing with 29% savings versus monthly. 500 portfolios, VIP support under 1 hour, more AI agent credits, AI deep research, and AI backtesting for traders. The Degen tier also includes Glider Token Risk (more on that below).
Team — Custom pricing with dedicated VIP support channel, community seats, and personalized features.
All paid plans come with a 7-day free trial and a 14-day money-back guarantee, so you can evaluate before committing. MadeOnSol readers get 10% off any CoinStats plan via our partner link.
Token Risk Assessment: Hexens Glider Integration
One feature that separates CoinStats from most portfolio trackers is the built-in token risk scanner, powered by Hexens' Glider engine.
Hexens is a blockchain security firm that audits smart contracts for major protocols. Their Glider tool decomposes contract logic and scans for approximately 22 risk categories including:
- Honeypot mechanisms (tokens you can buy but cannot sell)
- Hidden transfer fees and tax functions
- Centralized minting capabilities (can the deployer inflate supply?)
- Pausable or blockable transfers
- Upgradeable proxy contracts that can change behavior after deployment
- Blacklist and whitelist controls
- Balance manipulation functions
Each risk comes with a plain-language explanation, so you do not need to read Solidity or Rust to understand what the scanner found. This is particularly relevant for memecoin traders who encounter dozens of new tokens daily.
The catch: Glider Token Risk is currently available on the Degen plan only, and the coverage is strongest on EVM-compatible chains. Solana SPL token scanning through Glider is more limited than EVM coverage, since Solana programs have a fundamentally different architecture than EVM smart contracts. For Solana-specific token scanning, tools like RugCheck remain the go-to.