Bitcoin’s on-chain metrics are painting a picture of rather steady underlying activity even as the cryptocurrency’s price remains range-bound around $63,000. The latest data from on-chain analytics firm CryptoQuant shows that very small transfers are now dominating daily transaction volume on the network. Transactions valued at less than 0.01 BTC — roughly $630 at prevailing prices — currently represent about 80% of all daily Bitcoin transfers.
This marks a sharp increase from approximately 44% in 2023.
The shift has helped push overall transaction counts higher, with daily volumes recently exceeding 800,000 and average transactions per block staying near record levels.
This surge in micro-transactions is not driven by traditional payments or large-value movements. Instead, it stems largely from protocol-based activity on the Bitcoin blockchain.
The OP_RETURN opcode, which allows users to embed arbitrary data directly onto the chain without creating spendable outputs, has seen near-record usage.
Applications such as Runes (Bitcoin-native fungible tokens), Ordinals inscriptions, BRC-20 tokens, and various data-timestamping services are generating large numbers of tiny transfers.
Some of these transactions carry as little as 546 satoshis — equivalent to roughly $0.35.
CryptoQuant’s head of research, Julio Moreno, noted that this pattern is typical of protocol-driven ecosystems: high transaction counts paired with relatively low economic value transferred.
The smallest cohorts (under 0.001 BTC and under 0.01 BTC) have both climbed sharply in 2026, approaching previous peaks seen in 2024.The ripple effects are visible across the network.
CryptoQuant’s Bitcoin Network Activity Index has risen steadily since January 2026, reaching its highest level since late 2024.
It broke above its long-term trend in late March and has remained elevated, creating a clear divergence from the weaker price action.
Total daily transactions and transactions per block are both near all-time highs for the year, suggesting the increase reflects a structural change rather than a short-term spike.
This heightened activity has also increased pressure on the mempool — the queue of unconfirmed transactions.
It recently reached its highest count since February 2025, with approximately 128,000 pending transactions.
Congestion remains concentrated in low-fee cohorts, meaning time-sensitive or higher-value transfers have not yet faced severe delays.
However, sustained growth in non-financial on-chain usage could intensify competition for block space and push fees higher for conventional economic transactions.
The development underscores Bitcoin’s evolution as a platform capable of supporting diverse applications beyond simple value transfer.
While it boosts overall network utilization and can contribute to miner fee revenue, it also highlights ongoing scalability considerations.
If protocol-driven micro-activity continues expanding, everyday users may occasionally encounter elevated fees during periods of heightened inscription or token activity.
Overall, the data reveals a network that is becoming more active at the base layer, independent of short-term price movements. This micro-transaction dominance signals maturing on-chain experimentation and could shape fee dynamics and user experience in the months ahead.