
Hyper Foundation will allocate about $10 million in grants to help builders affected by the USDH sunset. The funding is meant to cover migration and wind-down costs as the Hyperliquid ecosystem moves more trading activity toward USDC.
Summary
- Hyper Foundation will fund builders affected by the USDH sunset with about $10m in grants.
- Eligible teams include HIP-1, HIP-3, HyperEVM protocols, bridges and Native Markets.
- The grant plan supports a wider move from USDH markets toward deeper USDC liquidity.
“Hyper Foundation announced approximately $10 million in grants to help builders affected by the USDH sunset, covering migration and wind-down costs,” Wu Blockchain said. The post said eligible recipients include HIP-1 and HIP-3 deployers, HyperEVM protocols, USDH bridges and Native Markets.
The grants come with a clear deadline. Recipients must complete migrations or orderly shutdowns by the end of July. The plan gives affected builders a limited period to update markets, move liquidity, adjust bridges or close USDH-related services.
Eligible builders face July deadline
HIP-1 deployers relate to spot market deployments, while HIP-3 deployers relate to perpetual market deployments. Both groups may need support because USDH served as a quote asset or liquidity route for some products. HyperEVM protocols and USDH bridge operators may also face direct technical changes.
Native Markets is also listed among eligible grant recipients. The firm won the validator vote to issue USDH in September 2025, beating larger bidders such as Paxos, Frax and Ethena. Its plan aimed to return reserve yield to the ecosystem through HYPE buybacks and ecosystem support.
The migration affects users as well as builders. Users holding USDH may need to convert balances, close positions or follow protocol-level migration steps. The officialUSDH migration page says the dashboard supports USDH to USDC and u.s. dollar fiat conversions until July 17, while the USDH/USDC spot order book will remain available.
USDC becomes the main stablecoin route
The grant program follows Hyperliquid’s wider move toward USDC. Coinbase became the official USDC treasury deployer on Hyperliquid in May, strengtheningUSDC as the aligned quote asset across the ecosystem. The deal also gave Coinbase the right to purchase USDH brand assets from Native Markets.
“USDH remains fully backed and maintained, with feeless conversions into USDC and fiat for onboarded customers available on dashboard.usdh.com,” Native Markets said. The statement means users still have conversion routes while USDH markets move through the transition.
https://twitter.com/nativemarkets/article/2054894518055448628
The shift marks a change from the original USDH strategy. USDH launched to reduce reliance on outside stablecoin issuers and keep more reserve yield inside Hyperliquid. However, two stablecoin systems can split liquidity and add friction for traders. A move back toward USDC may simplify markets and reduce conversion steps.
Migration plan follows earlier stablecoin race
The USDH sunset follows a competitive stablecoin race that drew wide attention across DeFi. Hyperliquid validators voted on the USDH ticker after proposals from Native Markets, Paxos, Frax, Agora and other teams.USDH later launched in a USDH/USDC pair and recorded more than $2 million in early trading.
The new grant plan now focuses on cleanup rather than expansion. Builders may need to change collateral settings, update front ends, move liquidity, close markets or support users during withdrawals. The July deadline gives the ecosystem a short window to finish those steps.
For Hyperliquid, the grants may reduce the risk of unfinished integrations and stranded liquidity. They also give builders a financial reason to complete the transition on time. The move shows how stablecoin strategy can change quickly when trading venues balance liquidity depth, user experience and reserve-yield economics.
