Pyth Network (Low-latency pull oracle sourced straight from 120+ first-party trading firms and exchanges) versus Chainlink (The industry-standard oracle network ) — how they differ on type, coverage and what they’re built for.
| Pyth Network | Chainlink | |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Pull | Push + Pull |
| Update model | Publishers stream prices to Pythnet → relayed via Wormhole → pulled on-demand by the consuming chain. Updates ≈ every 400 ms. | Decentralized Oracle Networks (DONs); heartbeat + deviation threshold. Data Streams add a low-latency pull mode. |
| Chains | 90+ | 40+ |
| Feeds | 1,300+ | 1,000+ |
| Security | Aggregates 120+ first-party publishers (exchanges, market makers) on Pythnet with confidence intervals. | Many independent, Sybil-resistant node operators per DON, with LINK staking and reputation. |
| TVS* | ~$3.1B | ~$33B |
| Token | PYTH | LINK |
| Best at | HFT-grade latency and real-world assets (equities/FX/commodities); pull means you only pay gas when you read | Broadest coverage + a full stack: CCIP cross-chain, VRF randomness, Functions, Proof of Reserve, Data Streams |
* Approximate total value secured — dated market snapshot (DefiLlama / provider reports, 2026).
Pick Pyth Network when hft-grade latency and real-world assets (equities/fx/commodities); pull means you only pay gas when you read matters most; pick Chainlink when broadest coverage + a full stack: ccip cross-chain, vrf randomness, functions, proof of reserve, data streams matters more.