
Ethereum closed out 2025 with a major on-chain milestone, processing 2.2 million transactions in a single day on December 30, the highest daily total in the network’s history.
Momentum remained strong into year-end, with the seven-day moving average climbing to 1.87 million transactions on December 31, decisively breaking the previous record of 1.61 million set during the peak of the 2021 NFT and DeFi boom.
The surge in activity follows a series of major protocol upgrades rolled out throughout 2025, most notably Pectra and Fusaka. These updates significantly expanded throughput while driving transaction costs sharply lower, with average fees dropping to around $0.17 per transaction.
Lower fees and higher capacity reduced congestion across the base layer and improved reliability during periods of heavy usage, enabling more consistent on-chain activity.
Unlike the sharp but short-lived spikes seen during earlier bull-market cycles, the latest transaction highs reflect structural usage rather than speculative bursts. Growth has been supported by expanding Layer 2 ecosystems, increasing stablecoin settlement, and rising real-world asset (RWA) tokenization activity. Together, these use cases are generating steady, repeat transaction flow rather than episodic surges tied to hype.
Network engagement also climbed to multi-year highs. Active addresses reached 728,904, the strongest reading since May 2021, signaling broad participation across wallets and applications. At the same time, 270,160 new addresses were created on December 31, marking the largest single-day onboarding event since early 2018 and underscoring renewed user growth.
Looking ahead, Ethereum’s roadmap remains active. Additional upgrades, including Glamsterdam, slated for 2026, are designed to further improve scalability, execution efficiency, and network performance. If transaction costs remain low and throughput continues to rise, the latest records may prove to be a foundation rather than a ceiling.
Taken together, Ethereum’s end-of-year surge points to a network transitioning from cyclical congestion to sustained, infrastructure-driven growth, a shift that could reshape how on-chain activity scales in the years ahead.

