Key Takeaways:
- Bitcoin active addresses fell 44% to 624,000 per day from the May 2021 peak
- New wallet creation dropped 43% to 278,000 daily as retail interest faded
- Spot ETF adoption and passive holding drove the decline in on-chain activity
Key Takeaways:

Bitcoin's on-chain activity has declined 44% from its May 2021 peak, with active addresses falling to 624,000 per day as retail enthusiasm wanes and institutional products reshape how investors gain exposure to the largest cryptocurrency.
"Active addresses are commonly used as a measure of how many unique participants are transacting on the network, while network growth tracks the creation of new addresses interacting with Bitcoin for the first time," according to Santiment data. Both metrics suggest Bitcoin is attracting fewer new participants and generating less day-to-day transactional activity than during the height of the 2021 bull cycle.
New wallet creation dropped 43% to 278,000 per day from 489,000 in May 2021, Santiment data shows. The decline comes even as Bitcoin's price has remained well above its 2021 levels for much of the current cycle, with the cryptocurrency trading 41% below its all-time high from October last year as of late May, according to market data.
The growing influence of spot exchange-traded funds and institutional investment vehicles may explain the divergence. These products allow investors to gain exposure to Bitcoin without moving coins on-chain or creating new wallets, effectively decoupling price action from network activity. Long-term holders have also become increasingly passive, choosing to store assets rather than transact frequently.
Why on-chain activity matters less this cycle
The decline in network participation does not necessarily signal a bearish outcome for Bitcoin. Historically, volatility in either direction is what sparks on-chain activity to rise, and the current sideways price movement has contributed to reduced transactional demand. The S&P 500 has gained 13% over the same period that Bitcoin has fallen 41% from its peak, drawing capital toward equities and precious metals.
Bitcoin's fundamentals remain intact. The network has never been hacked, its hash rate is near all-time highs, and its hard supply cap of 21 million coins is unchanged. The cryptocurrency has followed a four-year cycle tied to halving events, with the most recent halving occurring in April 2024. During prior cycles, Bitcoin has been in a bear market at this point after the halving before recovering to reach new all-time highs.
The previous major bear market saw Bitcoin drop 76% from November 2021 to November 2022, followed by a 154% gain in 2023 and a 119% gain in 2024. While the current drawdown of 41% from the peak is less severe, the pattern of post-halving weakness followed by recovery has held across three prior cycles.
What to watch next
Key support for Bitcoin sits at $58,000, with resistance at $72,000, according to technical levels tracked by CoinGecko. Open interest across derivatives exchanges stands at $28.5 billion, with funding rates near neutral at 0.003%, suggesting leveraged positioning is not excessively skewed in either direction.
The next catalyst for on-chain activity may come from a volatility event — either a macro shock or a Bitcoin-specific development — that draws participants back to the network. Until then, the divergence between price and on-chain activity is likely to persist as institutional flows through ETF products continue to dominate.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.