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The busiest quarter in history! Ethereum's first quarter of 2026 surpasses 200 million transactions, why hasn't the price kept up?
Ethereum’s first quarter of 2026 showed strong performance, with the mainnet transaction volume surpassing 200 million for the first time, setting a new record. Although on-chain activity is lively due to the booming development of Layer 2 solutions and stablecoins, the token price has diverged from the fundamentals.
Ethereum delivered an impressive first quarter this year, with on-chain activity reaching its busiest season ever. However, despite the fundamental recovery, the token’s price performance remains lackluster, disappointing many investors. Is this powerful comeback after three years a prelude to the next bull run, or are there hidden concerns?
According to the latest statistics from blockchain data platform Artemis, in the first quarter of 2026, the Ethereum mainnet processed a total of 200.4 million transactions, breaking the 200 million mark for the first time in a single quarter. Looking back at 2023, Ethereum’s quarterly transaction volume once fell to 90 million; the entire year of 2024 mostly hovered between 100 million and 120 million.
This wave of on-chain activity revival for Ethereum actually began quietly in mid-2025, with steady growth each quarter. In the first quarter of this year, transaction volume jumped 43% from the 145 million in the previous quarter, pulling out a beautiful “U-shaped growth curve” from the bottom in 2023.
However, paradoxically, the market’s enthusiasm for fundamentals has not reflected in the token price. Currently, Ether hovers around $2,355, more than 50% below its peak near $5,000 in August last year. This stark divergence may present a potential opportunity for investors skilled at uncovering value from fundamentals.
The main driver behind this surge in transaction flow is primarily attributed to “Layer 2 scaling solutions.” Currently, the two largest Layer 2 networks are Base and Arbitrum, with users flocking to these platforms for lower transaction fees. These activities are ultimately reflected on the Ethereum mainnet through “settlements” and “cross-chain bridging.”
Another major contributor is stablecoins. According to data platform Token Terminal, the total supply of stablecoins on Ethereum has hit a record high of $180 billion, accounting for about 60% of the global stablecoin market.
However, some analysts point out risks: the enthusiasm for Layer 2 may mask concerns over declining mainnet transaction fee revenue. Since Ethereum completed the “Dencun upgrade,” significantly reducing data storage costs for Layer 2 solutions, the fees earned per transaction have decreased substantially. In other words, even with increased on-chain activity, it cannot directly translate into more token “burning” as in the past, making it difficult to push up the price directly.
Overall, Ethereum’s on-chain activity has completed a multi-year recovery, which historically tends to precede price movements.
As for whether Ethereum’s record-breaking first quarter signals the start of the next big rally or a top in the cycle, the answer will depend on whether transaction volume can continue to stay above 200 million in the second quarter. More importantly, this growth momentum must come from new “real users,” not just bot-driven false prosperity.