TRON rarely gets the kind of coverage Solana, Ethereum, or Base get in crypto media, despite its impressive numbers.
DefiLlama now shows about $86.1 billion in stablecoins on TRON, with $USDT making up roughly 98.3% of that total. The same page puts TRON DeFi TVL near $4.13 billion.
TRON has become a place where people move dollars, park dollars, and settle transfers in large volume. It has far less cachet as a destination for DeFi experimentation.
Perhaps this is why RHEA Finance chose to plug-in to its environment. The cross-chain DEX and lending venue built around $NEAR’s intents system has added TRON, giving TRON users a way to trade, lend, and borrow across several chains from one entry point.
This deal lands in a part of crypto where usage already exists, yet multichain DeFi still feels cumbersome for ordinary users.
Why TRON fits this story
Cross-chain DeFi has sold a version of convenience few users ever truly got. Liquidity may sit across many networks, yet access still tends to involve bridges, extra wallets, route selection, unfamiliar addresses, delayed settlement, and a constant need to check whether assets arrived where they were meant to arrive.
Advanced users tolerate all of this, but everyone else tends to stop halfway through.
TRON offers a good test case for any product built around reducing those steps. Public data tied to TRON’s own ecosystem puts total accounts above 370 million and total transactions above 13 billion as of March 2026.
DefiLlama’s current figures point in a similar direction on daily activity, with about 2.94 million active addresses over 24 hours and 10.75 million transactions over the same period.
What RHEA is really adding
RHEA comes out of the merger of Ref Finance and Burrow Finance, two long-standing $NEAR DeFi products.
A user states the end goal, while a solver network and $NEAR-based signing system handle execution in the background. Additionally, Chain Signatures are used as a way for $NEAR accounts and contracts to sign and execute transactions across many blockchain protocols.
Separate $NEAR Intents docs walk through a swap flow where user funds reach an address derived through Chain Signatures, then enter an intents contract where solvers quote and execute against signed intents.
Ultimately, RHEA is trying to hide pathfinding, chain switching, and most of the operational burden inside the product itself. For a TRON user, it’s as easy as opening one interface, choosing an outcome, signing, and letting the system deal with routing.
The softer side of the pitch
RHEA’s PassKey account guide says a passkey is an identity and signing mechanism, not an on-chain wallet.
The same guide also says a passkey-only account can become unrecoverable if no backup control method is added, and recommends immediate binding of an external wallet after account creation.
It even says some functions, including borrow flows with outbound transfers, are strongly recommended only after an external wallet is bound.
While this brings the product back down to earth, it doesn’t kill the user-experience. A smoother front end remains useful. Yet the idea of “one wallet, one click, problem solved” still comes with caveats once user safety and recovery enter the picture.
Any article worth reading should say so.
What TRON gets out of it
TRON has long had a payments-and-stablecoins identity first, DeFi identity second.
DefiLlama’s current numbers show a wide spread between stablecoin capitalization on-chain and DeFi TVL, which helps explain why a cross-chain lending and trading product would view TRON as an attractive venue. There is a lot of dollar liquidity sitting on TRON. A service like RHEA is trying to give some of that capital a path into more active use without asking users to leave familiar rails.
It also hints at where chain abstraction may prove itself first. The best fit may be networks where users already move value efficiently, but run into friction when they try to trade, lend, borrow, or reach liquidity outside that environment. TRON is a strong example of that.
Worthwhile coverage?
Most chain-integration stories are routine. A protocol adds a network, publishes a quote, then moves on. This one has a bit more substance because it connects three ongoing threads in crypto:
- TRON’s position as a major home for $USDT
- $NEAR’s work around intents and cross-chain signing
- A simple product question – can multichain finance become easy enough for ordinary users to use without thinking through every step like experienced DeFi traders?
The technical side of that idea is already in place. $NEAR’s documentation shows how the system is meant to work. RHEA’s own guides suggest the user experience still comes with some caveats around recovery and wallet linking. TRON, meanwhile, brings a large and active user base, which gives the whole test real relevance.
The main story here is that a product built to hide cross-chain complexity has chosen one of crypto’s busiest stablecoin environments to test whether that approach can work in practice.
If the user experience holds up, this may say more about where DeFi products are heading in 2026 than a dozen louder launches.
The post RHEA Finance Connects TRON Users to Cross-Chain DeFi appeared first on BeInCrypto.
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