Bitcoin’s on-chain activity index has climbed to its highest reading since late 2024, creating a notable divergence: the network is processing more transactions than it has in over a year, yet spot price remains well below its all-time high. For traders who follow Bitcoin fundamentals alongside price, that kind of split deserves a close look before drawing conclusions.
What Happened
CryptoQuant’s Bitcoin Network Activity Index — a composite measure tracking active addresses, daily transaction count, and overall network usage — has broken above its long-term trend line for the first time since December 2024. The index now sits approximately 7% below the all-time high it posted in September 2024, a level it has not been close to since the peak of the last bull cycle.
Daily Bitcoin transactions have crossed 800,000, a figure that more than doubles the lows recorded during 2025. The sustained above-trend reading has been in place since late March 2026, meaning this is not a one-day spike but a multi-week structural shift in how the network is being used.
Drilling further into the transaction data reveals a significant compositional change. Transfers valued below 0.01 BTC now account for roughly 80% of all on-chain activity — up sharply from approximately 44% in 2023. The network is far busier than before, but the dominant transaction type has shifted from large economic transfers to small, often protocol-driven ones.
The driver is well-documented: Ordinals inscriptions, Runes protocol mints, BRC-20 token activity, and data-timestamping services that write arbitrary information to the Bitcoin blockchain via the OP_RETURN output field. Following a contentious community debate in 2025, the previous byte-size restriction on OP_RETURN was lifted, removing a ceiling that had constrained this type of usage for years.
What It Means for Traders
At first glance, a surge in on-chain activity while price stalls looks like a bullish leading indicator. The intuition is straightforward: more network usage historically correlates with rising demand, and demand precedes price. In previous cycles, periods when the Network Activity Index broke back above trend have often coincided with, or slightly preceded, price recoveries.
The composition of that activity matters, however. When 80% of transactions carry less than 0.01 BTC in value, the economic weight per transaction is low. Protocol-level activity — inscriptions, token mints, arbitrary data writes — does not represent capital moving from buyers to sellers the way spot trades or large wallet movements do. It represents developers, collectors, and automated services using Bitcoin’s block space, which is useful for network health but is a different signal than organic demand from new market participants.
Traders should therefore treat this divergence as a two-sided data point. The activity rebound suggests the blockchain is alive and being used across multiple layers, which supports a floor under miner revenue and argues against a complete market collapse. At the same time, it does not by itself confirm that price-relevant buying pressure is building. The mempool expanding to roughly 128,000 unconfirmed transactions — its highest level since February 2025 — reflects congestion from low-fee protocol activity, not necessarily a wave of high-value economic transactions clearing.
Traders watching for a genuine demand-side recovery would want to see the active address count rising alongside larger average transaction values, not just raw transaction volume driven by sub-0.01 BTC moves. Those two signals together would argue for a more meaningful shift in market participation.
The Bigger Picture
The divergence between network activity and market price is not entirely new territory for Bitcoin. In prior cycles, on-chain metrics have often led price by weeks or months, acting as early-stage indicators that accumulation was underway before it showed up in candlestick charts. What makes the current situation distinct is the structural change in what kinds of transactions are dominating the count.
Bitcoin’s block space has become a multi-use resource. The protocol changes of the last two years opened it to use cases that go well beyond peer-to-peer value transfer: token issuance, inscription markets, data storage, and developer experimentation. That diversification of block space demand creates a floor for miner fee revenue and arguably makes the network more resilient, but it also means the traditional read of “high transaction count equals high demand for BTC” requires more nuance than it did in earlier cycles.
On a longer timeframe, sustained above-trend network activity — even when partially protocol-driven — has historically corresponded with market bottoming processes rather than market tops. That historical pattern is worth watching, particularly if the composition of activity shifts toward larger economic transactions over the coming weeks. Whether the current environment follows that playbook will depend in part on broader macro conditions and whether capital begins rotating back into digital assets at scale.
The immediate takeaway for on-chain watchers is that the Bitcoin network is not dormant. It is processing more transactions than it has in well over a year, its activity index is the strongest since the last cycle peak, and a clear divergence from spot price has opened. That divergence may close upward, downward, or sideways — but ignoring it means missing one of the more structurally interesting signals the chain has produced in recent months.
This article is informational only and does not constitute financial advice.


















