Sonic Labs VI Revenue Outpaces Fee Burns by 400% in First 10 Weeks - Blockonomi
by Brenda Mary · BlockonomiTLDR:
Table of Contents
- TLDR:
- Early VI Numbers Show a Clear Lead Over Fee Burns
- The Case for Product Revenue Over Gas-Based Value Capture
- Sonic’s VI model generated $13,000 in revenue, converting to 295,454.55 S in deflationary equivalent since March 1.
- Total fee-related burns reached only 59,786.728 S, putting VI impact at roughly 4.94 times the burn amount.
- Early VI revenue came solely from USSD and Metropolis vault activity, with the broader model yet to scale.
- Sonic Labs confirmed the full VI model has barely started, with more product revenue lines still ahead.
Sonic Labs has reported that its Vertical Integration model is generating measurable deflationary results just weeks after launch.
Since March 1, 2026, early VI revenue has produced roughly 400% more deflationary impact than fee-related burns over the same period.
The data comes from a narrow set of products, with the broader model yet to scale. These early numbers offer a concrete look at how the network plans to capture value beyond gas fees.
Early VI Numbers Show a Clear Lead Over Fee Burns
Sonic’s VI model generated $13,000 in revenue between March 1 and May 11, 2026. Using a TWAP price of $0.044, that converts to 295,454.55 S in deflationary equivalent.
Over the same window, total fee-related burns reached only 59,786.728 S. That figure includes 10,358.726 S from direct transaction fee burns and 49,428.002 S from FeeM-related returns that were burned.
Sonic Labs captured the early result on X, saying, “Sonic’s Vertical Integration is outperforming expectations right out of the gate. In the first 10 weeks, early VI revenue produced ~400% more deflationary impact than fee-related burns over the same window.”
The team also noted the scope of the current implementation, adding, “This is only from $USSD and @MetropolisDEX vault activity. The full VI model has barely started.”
No other revenue lines were contributing during this window, making the ratio more telling given how limited the setup remains.
Total transaction fees for the period were 207,174.525 S. The network splits fees as 90% to the FeeM Treasury, 5% to validators, and 5% to burn.
FeeM also returned 98,856.004 S, split evenly between rewards and burns during the same block range. The ratio puts VI impact at roughly 4.94 times the total fee-related burn amount.
The Case for Product Revenue Over Gas-Based Value Capture
High-throughput chains are built to keep execution costs low. As gas fees fall, fee-burn models produce less deflationary pressure on the native asset.
Sonic’s VI thesis addresses this by sourcing revenue from native financial products instead of relying on transaction pricing alone.
The network still burns a portion of transaction fees. However, the early data shows that product-level revenue can outpace that burn by a wide margin, even in a minimal setup. Users continue to benefit from cheap execution while aligned products contribute back to the network economy.
Sonic Labs described this as a proof of concept rather than a mature revenue base. The $13,000 figure is not presented as a major milestone but as early confirmation that the mechanism works as intended.
As the team stated, “If this is possible with a narrow implementation, the model becomes more interesting as more product surfaces begin contributing revenue.”
More product surfaces are expected to contribute revenue as the full VI model rolls out. The current result reflects only what a narrow, early version of the system can produce.
Additional revenue lines remain ahead, and the team views this first data point as a signal of the model’s direction.