Ethereum’s base-layer transaction count hit an all-time high of 200.4 million in Q1 2026, marking the first breach of the 200-million threshold and a 43% sequential jump from Q4 2025’s 145 million. This caps a multi-year U-shaped recovery from the ~90 million quarterly low in 2023. The surge is almost entirely settlement and bridging activity from dominant Layer 2s (Base, Arbitrum) plus record $180 billion stablecoin supply on Ethereum, representing 60% of the global market.
Crucially, the Dencun upgrade has severed the historical link between on-chain volume and fee revenue: L2 data costs collapsed, so higher throughput no longer produces meaningful ETH burns or staking yield accretion. ETH therefore trades at $2,328—more than 50% below its August 2025 peak—despite the strongest usage metrics in network history. Analysts flag that a rising share of stablecoin volume is bot-driven, raising questions about organic demand sustainability.
The data set is binary: either this is the inflection that historically precedes ETH price recovery by 1–2 quarters, or it is the local top of a cycle inflated by synthetic activity and structurally impaired tokenomics. Markets are currently pricing the latter, creating the highest-conviction fundamental-versus-price gap since the 2021–2022 cycle.

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