Ethereum’s network activity has reached a new milestone. According to data shared by Token Terminal, weekly transaction count has climbed to an all-time high of 17.3 million, while the median transaction fee has dropped to a record low of just $0.008.
The divergence between rising usage and falling costs marks a significant structural shift for the network.
Historically, spikes in Ethereum activity have been accompanied by sharp increases in transaction fees. During previous bull cycles, congestion regularly pushed median fees into double-digit dollar territory.
Now, the opposite is happening.
Weekly transactions are accelerating toward new highs, yet fees continue trending lower. The median cost of just under one cent suggests that users are interacting with the network at scale without facing the friction that once limited adoption.
This combination, peak activity with minimal cost, indicates that Ethereum’s recent scaling upgrades are functioning as intended.
Lower fees during rising demand typically reflect improved network efficiency rather than weak activity. In this case, transaction throughput has expanded while cost per transfer has compressed.
That dynamic suggests:
Rather than short-term speculative bursts, the sustained climb in weekly transactions points to steady usage growth across DeFi, stablecoins, and other on-chain applications.
In past cycles, network growth often strained Ethereum’s infrastructure. Today’s data shows a different environment. Activity is climbing, but the cost structure is no longer acting as a bottleneck.
If transaction growth continues while fees remain suppressed, it could reinforce Ethereum’s positioning as scalable infrastructure rather than just a high-fee settlement layer.
The current divergence may represent one of the clearest signs yet that Ethereum’s long-term scaling roadmap is translating into measurable on-chain results.
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