Pump.fun was built by a pseudonymous team led by 'Alon' (co-founder Alon Cohen confirmed after the ICO). The platform launched in January 2024 as a Solana-native meme coin launchpad. It became the fastest crypto application to reach $100 million in cumulative revenue and has since generated over $800 million total. The July 2025 PUMP token ICO raised $1.3 billion in 12 minutes — one of the largest ICOs in crypto history. The team cashed out $465.5 million to USDC in November 2025 as PUMP fell over 25%. The UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has banned Pump.fun from operating in the UK.
Pump.fun allows anyone to create a meme coin on Solana in under 5 minutes with no coding required, using a bonding curve mechanism where early buyers get lower prices and the price rises with each purchase. When a token reaches sufficient liquidity, it 'graduates' to PumpSwap (the platform's own DEX). By April 2026, Pump.fun burned approximately $370 million (36%) of the circulating PUMP supply and committed 50% of future net platform revenue to ongoing buybacks. Multi-chain expansion beyond Solana is planned. PUMP holders benefit economically from the buyback-and-burn programme.
PUMP has approximately 430 billion tokens in circulation after the April 2026 36% supply burn, out of approximately 1 trillion total. PUMP peaked at approximately $0.0088 and currently trades around $0.0018 — approximately 55% below its $0.004 ICO price. The $370 million burn was a significant deflationary event. A $5.5 billion class-action lawsuit alleges Pump.fun operates an 'unlicensed casino' and 'rigged slot machine' naming Solana Labs and Jito Labs as co-defendants.
Pump.fun has had approximately 71% market share of all daily token launches on Solana but competitor Bonk.fun briefly overtook it in July 2025. Pump.fun processes approximately $612,000 in daily platform fees generating approximately $534,000 in net revenue. The platform's dominance is built on first-mover advantage and brand recognition in the meme coin creation space.
Approximately 98.6% of tokens launched on Pump.fun are scams or pump-and-dumps. The $5.5 billion class-action lawsuit alleges the platform is an unlicensed casino. The UK FCA has banned the platform. The founding team cashed out $465 million to stablecoin while the token fell, which is a significant governance concern. PUMP remains 55% below its ICO price, meaning all public sale participants are sitting on losses.
Multi-chain expansion to Ethereum and Monad significantly increases fee revenue and therefore buyback rate, the class-action lawsuit is dismissed, or the meme coin sector enters a bull market that lifts platform activity significantly.
Class-action lawsuit succeeds creating material financial liability, additional major exchanges or regulators ban Pump.fun, or market sentiment rotates away from meme coin speculation reducing platform revenue.
We would become more positive if: class-action dismissed, regulatory clarity resolves UK ban, and multi-chain expansion materially grows revenue. We would become more cautious if: lawsuit escalates, additional regulatory bans, or founder team sells further PUMP into the market.
Pump.fun built the most profitable meme coin launchpad in crypto history — $800 million in cumulative revenue from enabling 11.9 million token launches. The April 2026 $370 million burn is a genuine deflationary commitment. The severe red flags — 98.6% scam rate on tokens launched, $5.5 billion class-action lawsuit, UK FCA ban, and founding team cashing out $465 million — make this one of the most ethically complex projects reviewed on EnterCrypto. A speculative position for those who believe in the platform's revenue model despite the legal and regulatory exposure.
Legal warning: Pump.fun faces a $5.5 billion class-action lawsuit alleging it operates an unlicensed casino. The UK FCA has banned the platform. Irish investors should be aware of these legal proceedings and the regulatory risk they create before considering any PUMP position. See our scam awareness guide.