
Behind Bitcoin’s apparent stability, an imbalance threatens the network’s sustainability. Since April, transaction fees have dropped by more than 80 %, shaking the remuneration model of mining companies. Amid the rise of ETFs and after a demanding halving, it is Bitcoin’s internal economy that is faltering. Lower fees, fewer incentives, more risks to protocol security, the crisis is here, structural, and raises a question the ecosystem can no longer ignore.
Since the April 2024 halving, the block reward was halved to 3.125 BTC, while emotions take over the Bitcoin market. To maintain network security, the protocol now relies much more on transaction fees as economic incentives for mining specialists.
However, this mechanism is experiencing a sharp drop. According to the Galaxy Digital report, transaction fees have plunged by more than 80% since April, directly threatening the financial viability of mining activity.
The data is worrying :
This combination of a severe halving, fee collapse, activity downturn, and migration to alternatives is putting unprecedented pressure on Bitcoin’s economy. The central question remains: under these conditions, will mining companies still have an interest in securing the network in the long term?
Facing this fee crisis, some see in the rise of BTCfi, Bitcoin-native decentralized finance, a potential solution.
Unlike Ethereum or Solana, where DeFi relies on internal smart contracts, BTCfi directly uses Bitcoin as the underlying asset.
“Every BTCfi action requires moving bitcoins”, emphasizes Pierre Samaties, operations director at Dfinity Foundation. This movement triggers computations, which consume block space, and this space has a cost. In other words, the more BTCfi applications are used, the higher the fees generated on the network.
Julian Mezger, marketing director at Liquidium, stresses that Bitcoin’s infrastructure has profoundly evolved in recent years. “In five years, it has gone from a simple settlement protocol to a multi-layered ecosystem”, he believes.
This transformation would lay the foundation for a DeFi native to Bitcoin, capable of supporting lending, exchange, or yield generation activities while boosting on-chain activity. If this trajectory is confirmed, Bitcoin could transcend its traditional role as digital gold to become a foundational financial infrastructure, that is, an essential and programmable building block of decentralized financial systems.

