- Bitcoin transaction activity has climbed to its highest level since late 2024 despite BTC trading far below its all-time high.
- Most of the growth is coming from smaller transactions, signaling increased protocol-driven activity rather than large capital flows.
- Rising network usage has not translated into price strength, with Bitcoin still down sharply over the past month.
Bitcoin may be stuck in a difficult market cycle, but activity on its network is telling a very different story. While BTC continues trading nearly 50% below its all-time high of $126,080, transaction counts across the blockchain have been quietly climbing for months, reaching levels not seen since the strongest periods of activity in 2024.
According to new data from CryptoQuant, Bitcoin network usage has been steadily increasing since January 2026. Activity recently climbed to its highest point since late 2024 and now sits just 7% below the all-time peak recorded in September of that year. What’s particularly interesting is that this growth is happening while Bitcoin remains locked in a broader bearish trend, something that doesn’t happen very often.

Bitcoin Transactions Reach Near-Record Levels
CryptoQuant noted that both total transaction counts and daily average transactions have surged close to historical highs. This marks a sharp reversal from the contraction that dominated network activity through much of late 2024 and early 2025.
The firm described the current environment as Bitcoin’s first sustained period of above-trend activity since mid-2024. In other words, people are using the network more frequently even though prices continue struggling. Normally, strong activity and rising prices tend to move together. This time, the relationship appears disconnected.
That disconnect is forcing analysts to look deeper into the data to understand exactly what’s driving the increase.
Smaller Transactions Are Dominating the Network
The answer appears to lie in the size of the transactions themselves. While activity is rising, the economic value being transferred is much smaller than what was seen during previous periods of elevated network usage.
CryptoQuant found that transactions involving less than 0.01 BTC and those under 0.001 BTC have increased significantly. Together, these smaller transfers now account for roughly 80% of daily Bitcoin transactions. For comparison, they represented only about 44% of network activity back in 2023.
That shift suggests a different kind of growth. Rather than large investors moving substantial amounts of capital, much of today’s activity appears to be driven by automated protocols, applications, and services interacting with the blockchain. The network is busy, but the average transaction size has become considerably smaller.

OP_RETURN Usage Explodes
Another clue comes from the growing use of Bitcoin’s OP_RETURN feature. This transaction field allows users to attach additional information to Bitcoin transactions, effectively expanding the blockchain’s utility beyond simple value transfers.
After years of debate, restrictions on OP_RETURN data were removed last year. Since then, usage has accelerated dramatically. CryptoQuant reports that OP_RETURN activity has surged toward record levels throughout 2026.
The growth is being fueled by several emerging use cases, including Bitcoin NFTs, timestamping services, and other protocol-based applications. Many of these generate large volumes of tiny transactions, sometimes referred to as “dust” transactions, which helps explain why overall transaction counts are climbing while transferred value remains relatively low.
Network Strength Isn’t Lifting Bitcoin’s Price
Normally, rising network activity would be viewed as a bullish signal. More users, more transactions, and greater utility often strengthen the long-term investment case for a blockchain. However, Bitcoin’s price has so far refused to follow the same path.
BTC remains under pressure, falling roughly 17% over the past 30 days and recently trading near $63,865. The disconnect highlights a key reality of the current market: strong blockchain activity alone is not enough to overcome broader macroeconomic concerns, investor caution, and ongoing risk-off sentiment.
For now, Bitcoin appears to be experiencing two very different stories at the same time. On-chain activity is booming, supported by growing protocol usage and expanding applications. Yet in the financial markets, traders remain cautious, keeping downward pressure on the asset’s price.
Whether network growth eventually translates into stronger market performance remains one of the biggest questions facing Bitcoin investors today.
Disclaimer: BlockNews provides independent reporting on crypto, blockchain, and digital finance. All content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Readers should do their own research before making investment decisions. Some articles may use AI tools to assist in drafting, but every piece is reviewed and edited by our editorial team of experienced crypto writers and analysts before publication.

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