Ask which blockchain is the fastest and the answer changes depending on which number you trust. As of May 29, 2026, the live Chainspect dashboard puts Internet Computer ($ICP) on top for real-time throughput at about 2,370 transactions per second, with Solana ($SOL) the quickest of the heavily used chains at around 876. That is the short version. The longer, more useful version is that "fastest" isn't a single number, and the ranking can flip within a week.
Before anyone takes a screenshot of a leaderboard and calls it settled, it is worth knowing what speed actually measures, where to check it, and why the crown keeps changing hands.
What does "fast" even mean?
There is no one metric for speed. Reputable trackers measure three different things, and a chain can win one while losing the others:
- TPS (transactions per second): How many transactions the network clears in a second. Watch for the gap between theoretical max (a lab figure, basically marketing) and real, sustained TPS under live load. The real number is the one that matters.
- Block time: How long it takes to produce a new block. Shorter block time means your transaction gets picked up faster, so the chain feels snappier.
- Finality: When a transaction becomes irreversible and you can actually trust it is done. This is the metric most people ignore and the one that shapes user experience the most.
Here is the catch that ties them together. A chain can post high TPS and still feel slow if finality drags. Bitcoin clears blocks roughly every 8 minutes and reaches high-confidence finality in about an hour. Ethereum settles in around 13 seconds per block and takes close to 13 minutes for full finality. Meanwhile chains like Aptos, Sui, and $ICP advertise near-instant finality measured in fractions of a second. Throughput is not the whole story.
What does the live data show right now?
Chainspect is the cleanest public dashboard built specifically for this question. It tracks real-time TPS, max observed TPS, theoretical max, block time, and finality across L1s, sidechains, and major L2s in one view, and it updates continuously.
Here is the top of the real-time board on May 29, 2026:
- $ICP: roughly 2,370 TPS, 480ms blocks, 0-second finality. The current throughput leader has a theoretical ceiling above 209,000.
- Solana: around 876 TPS, 397ms blocks, 12.8-second finality. The fastest of the chains people actually use at scale, with a peak observed near 6,284 TPS during busy periods.
- $BNB Chain: about 215 TPS, 450ms blocks, 2-second finality.
- TRON: roughly 184 TPS.
- Stellar: around 168 TPS, with deterministic finality at ledger close.
- Aptos: about 114 TPS on 40ms blocks and 0-second finality.
Different trackers crown different leaders, and that comes down to what they measure. A separate Chainalysis study of nine major networks, published in May 2026, ranks Solana the throughput leader, processing more than twice the on-chain volume of the next chain, TRON. $ICP is not in that dataset, which is how it can top a live TPS board while Solana wears the crown in an institutional comparison. Both are true.
You may also notice $XRP Ledger is missing. That is not an oversight. Chainspect lists the chain but carries no live data for it, so it falls outside the ranking. According to Ripple's documentation, the ledger handles around 1,500 TPS in sustained use and settles in 3 to 5 seconds, with no real gap between confirmation and finality because it finalizes the moment validators reach consensus. That deterministic settlement is why $XRP stays in every payments conversation, even when it never tops a raw throughput chart.
Stellar is also having a moment, and its speed profile is part of the pitch: around 168 TPS, deterministic finality at ledger close, and fees of a fraction of a cent. That kind of predictable settlement, not headline throughput, is what keeps drawing the institutional tokenization deals to it.
What about Layer 2s?
The L1 board only tells half the story, because much of Ethereum's activity now lives on rollups. For that, L2Beat is the trusted reference. It measures user operations per second across the rollup ecosystem, and right now it puts combined rollup throughput at roughly 40 times Ethereum mainnet's own activity. Base and Arbitrum are the two heavyweights, and on Chainspect's live board Base is clearing the higher sustained throughput of the pair, around 112 TPS.
But throughput is only one axis, and this is where Arbitrum earns its place. According to Chainalysis on-chain data, Arbitrum has held the top spot for fastest time to finality almost continuously since mid-2024, with $BNB Chain and TRON close behind. $BNB has been actively chasing that finality crown: after the Fermi fork pushed it to sub-second blocks, the Osaka/Mendel hard fork in April 2026 specifically upgraded its fast-finality mechanism for quicker, more reliable confirmations. So the chains that do not top the TPS charts can still complete and confirm a transaction faster than most.
The speed Arbitrum wins on is soft finality, the point where a transaction is accepted and ordered by the network. Hard finality, when that batch is fully settled back on Ethereum and becomes irreversible, runs on a different clock entirely, anywhere from about 15 minutes to several hours depending on proof generation. So an L2 can be the fastest chain you transact on and still be slow at the deepest layer of security. Which number matters depends on whether you are swapping a memecoin or settling something you cannot afford to have reversed.
Why the "fastest" crown keeps moving
Speed rankings are a moving target, and any article claiming a permanent winner is selling something. A few things to keep in mind before you bet on a number:
- These figures shift hourly with upgrades, congestion, and memecoin frenzies. A chain ranked third today can lead tomorrow.
- "Fastest" depends on the job. A payments chain, a high-frequency trading app, and a tokenized bond are optimized for completely different things.
- Several high-speed chains have traded away some decentralization or suffered outages to hit those numbers. Raw throughput is not free.
The biggest TPS figures you see in marketing decks are almost always theoretical ceilings measured in controlled tests, not what the network does on a normal day. So the real question was never which chain is fastest. It is which chain is the fastest at the specific thing you need it to do, and that answer has a different name depending on whether you are trading, paying, or moving funds.
Sources:
- Chainspect Live scalability dashboard ranking blockchains by real-time TPS, max TPS, theoretical max, block time, and finality across L1s, sidechains, and L2s.
- L2Beat Scaling activity tracker measuring user operations per second across Ethereum rollups and the scaling factor versus Ethereum mainnet.
- Chainalysis On-chain comparison of nine major networks across throughput, time to finality, fee stability, contagion risk, and illicit exposure for tokenization.
- $BNB Chain Official post on the Osaka/Mendel hard fork, including the fast-finality upgrade via an in-memory voting pool.
- Dune Docs $XRP Ledger overview confirming roughly 1,500 TPS sustained throughput
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