Wanchain’s crosschain push has fast become the headline act in Cardano’s recent DeFi revival, and the numbers the team shared this week read like a turning point. The protocol’s social post claimed it “sparked $130 million in crosschain volume between Cardano and the greater crypto world,” and asserted that the activity translated into “over $80 million in inflows for Cardano.” Those are bold figures, and early signs suggest they’re reshaping how value flows into the once-isolated ecosystem.
The project that built the bridge made history back in 2023 by becoming the first to link Cardano to the wider blockchain world. Since then, the bridge has handled more than $163 million in cumulative bridged volume and processed over 15,000 transactions, according to the ledger of events surrounding the rollout. Those raw totals have tangible downstream effects: decentralized apps on Cardano are reporting new stablecoin markets, surging TVL, and an influx of users who previously could not easily bring assets onto the chain.
Fragmentation has long been Cardano’s Achilles’ heel. Despite strong research credentials and loyal developer support, the network’s isolation from the broader crypto economy limited liquidity and user activity, a problem the bridge was designed to address. By linking disparate chains, the infrastructure acts like a system of trade routes carved between islands, allowing money and markets to move freely instead of stagnating in isolated pockets. The immediate result, advocates say, is a healthier and more dynamic on-chain economy.
Early beneficiaries include Cardano’s largest lending and trading venues. Liqwid, the leading lending-and-borrowing protocol on the chain, has seen its supplied USDC swell dramatically, a jump from roughly $500,000 to more than $9 million within a year, according to campaign highlights tied to the bridge’s activity. Meanwhile, Minswap, Cardano’s main decentralized exchange, hit record TVL in both stablecoin and BTC pools after crosschain assets began arriving in steady streams. Those milestones have been accompanied by targeted liquidity campaigns: a joint push between the bridge, the DEX, and a third-party protocol brought $2.5 million of fresh liquidity into Cardano and onboarded hundreds of new users.
Cardano’s Crosschain Moment
Perhaps the most attention-grabbing development is Bitcoin DeFi on Cardano. Small amounts of BTC first appeared on the chain in mid-2025; by January 21, 2026, the bridged total rose to 16.55 BTC, a roughly 330% increase in half a year. That movement has unlocked new products, from BTC trading pools on the DEX to leverage offerings on emerging platforms, expanding the kinds of financial services Cardano can host. Ethereum inflows have followed a similar path, growing substantially as protocols began supporting crosschain ETH positions.
The bridge’s role in a major airdrop last winter also underlined its growing real-world importance. A mass distribution of the $NIGHT token relied on a wrapped version routed through the bridge so that major exchanges could participate; one prominent exchange even issued a Wanchain-wrapped version to facilitate distribution. That campaign resulted in nearly $50 million of NIGHT moving between the BNB Chain and Cardano, proving the bridge can handle large, exchange-scale flows without friction.
Behind these headline figures is a practical list of routes the bridge now supports, connecting Cardano to a wide cross-section of networks in the current crypto stack. The expanded connectivity gives developers and users new options for swapping, lending, and yield-generation while reducing the friction that once kept liquidity elsewhere.
Skeptics will reasonably ask how durable this momentum is. Crypto markets swing with sentiment, and technical integration is only one ingredient in long-term growth. Still, the arrival of secure, polished crosschain infrastructure at this stage removes a structural bottleneck that previously capped Cardano’s economic reach. If the past year is any guide, opening those channels has already produced measurable gains in TVL, stablecoin adoption, and the diversity of assets available to Cardano users.
For now, the bridge’s backers are clear-eyed about the next phase: building more secure, scalable crosschain rails before the next big wave of interest returns to decentralized finance. If those rails hold, Cardano’s DeFi renaissance may prove less like a flash and more like the start of a sustained structural shift, one where interoperability turns isolation into opportunity.


