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|---|---|---|
| Rating | (0) | (0) |
| Pricing | Free | Free |
| Health | Healthy | Healthy |
| Chain | solana only | solana only |
| Open Source | ||
| Features | 4 features | 4 features |
| Upvotes | ▲ 0 | ▲ 0 |
| Twitter Followers | 102,445 | — |
| Categories | Staking, Liquid Staking | Liquid Staking |
| Description | Coalition of 25 independent Solana validators with IndieSOL liquid staking | Algorithmic liquid staking on Solana with scnSOL |
Layer33 Layer33 is a collective of 25 independent Solana validators committed to network decentralization with 18M SOL combined stake. Offers IndieSOL, a composable liquid staking token earning standard rewar... Socean Socean is a fully autonomous algorithmic stake pool on Solana that optimizes delegation across validators for better returns and network decentralization. Users receive scnSOL tokens that appreciate a...
Both Layer33 and Socean hold similar community ratings, suggesting users find comparable value in each. Your choice should come down to specific features, pricing, and ecosystem fit rather than overall score.
Layer33 uses a free model, while Socean is free. Both tools are free, so cost isn't a deciding factor — focus on features and reliability instead.
Layer33 offers 4 features including IndieSOL liquid staking token for DeFi composability, 25 independent validators with 18M SOL stake, Open-source validator monitoring tools, and 1 more. Socean counters with 4 features including Algorithmic validator delegation for optimized returns, scnSOL liquid staking token usable across DeFi, Instant unstaking support, and 1 more. The right choice depends on which specific features matter for your use case — check the individual review pages for full breakdowns.
We monitor both tools around the clock for uptime, SSL validity, and response times. Layer33 currently has a healthy health status with 100.0% uptime over the last 30 days. Socean is rated healthy. For tools you rely on daily — especially trading bots or wallets — uptime and speed are non-negotiable.
Layer33's key strengths include directly supports solana network decentralization, institutional-quality infrastructure with open-source tools. Socean stands out for algorithmic delegation promotes network decentralization, low fees — 0.03% withdrawal, ~2% management on rewards. On the flip side, Layer33's weaknesses include newer lst with less defi integration than jitosol, while Socean's main drawback is smaller tvl compared to marinade or jito.
Both Layer33 and Socean operate in the liquid staking space, so this is a direct head-to-head. Neither has a clear community advantage, so your decision should be feature-driven. We recommend trying both — Layer33 is free to start and Socean is free to start. Read user reviews on each tool's page for real-world feedback from the Solana community.