Transactions are increasing as Ethereum moves toward its $5,000 target. However, increased competition is reducing network revenue and user interest.
According to data, Ethereum's (ETH) average daily transaction count is near all-time highs, with over 1.7 million transactions recorded on Tuesday.
For comparison, Ethereum's second-layer networks, Arbitrum and Base, recorded 3.4 million and 8.6 million transactions, respectively, according to The Tie, while rival first-layer blockchain Aptos hosted 3.8 million transactions on Monday.
Active addresses on Ethereum have also remained largely stable, fluctuating between 400,000 and 600,000 active addresses since 2018, occasionally exceeding 1 million.
Data shows that a significant portion of Ethereum's traffic is shifting to other blockchains, eroding its market share, reducing protocol revenues, and forcing network stakeholders to reevaluate a different strategy for its smart contract network.
Misaligned incentives and new-generation blockchains are eroding Ethereum's market share
Once the undisputed champion of general-purpose smart contract platforms, the world's first blockchain smart contract network is facing increasing competition from within and outside its ecosystem.
Network fees on the Ethereum mainframe have fallen since 2022. This is partly due to the Dencun upgrade, which went live in March 2024 and significantly lowered network fees for Ethereum's second-layer networks.
This upgrade has incentivized users to migrate to these cheaper second-layer solutions to save on high network transaction fees, which can reach as much as $50 per transaction during peak periods.
High-throughput first-layer networks like Solana and Sui are also competing with Ethereum for user attention and crypto market share. This is forcing the Ethereum Foundation to adapt to these growing changes and reassess the network's scaling and execution roadmap.
However, trying to compete directly with these new layer-one networks on performance metrics like transaction throughput could be “dangerous” for Ethereum.
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#ETH Countdown To A New High Despite record transaction traffic on Ethereum, revenues are declining sharply.
Transactions are increasing as Ethereum moves toward its $5,000 target. However, increased competition is reducing network revenue and user interest.
According to data, Ethereum's (ETH) average daily transaction count is near all-time highs, with over 1.7 million transactions recorded on Tuesday.
For comparison, Ethereum's second-layer networks, Arbitrum and Base, recorded 3.4 million and 8.6 million transactions, respectively, according to The Tie, while rival first-layer blockchain Aptos hosted 3.8 million transactions on Monday.
Active addresses on Ethereum have also remained largely stable, fluctuating between 400,000 and 600,000 active addresses since 2018, occasionally exceeding 1 million.
Data shows that a significant portion of Ethereum's traffic is shifting to other blockchains, eroding its market share, reducing protocol revenues, and forcing network stakeholders to reevaluate a different strategy for its smart contract network.
Misaligned incentives and new-generation blockchains are eroding Ethereum's market share
Once the undisputed champion of general-purpose smart contract platforms, the world's first blockchain smart contract network is facing increasing competition from within and outside its ecosystem.
Network fees on the Ethereum mainframe have fallen since 2022. This is partly due to the Dencun upgrade, which went live in March 2024 and significantly lowered network fees for Ethereum's second-layer networks.
This upgrade has incentivized users to migrate to these cheaper second-layer solutions to save on high network transaction fees, which can reach as much as $50 per transaction during peak periods.
High-throughput first-layer networks like Solana and Sui are also competing with Ethereum for user attention and crypto market share. This is forcing the Ethereum Foundation to adapt to these growing changes and reassess the network's scaling and execution roadmap.
However, trying to compete directly with these new layer-one networks on performance metrics like transaction throughput could be “dangerous” for Ethereum.