The decentralized finance sector is losing one of its early consumer-facing tools as Zapper prepares to shut down. Co-founder and CEO Seb Audet announced on July 8, 2026, that the popular portfolio tracking platform will cease all services on August 3, 2026. Zapper originated as a personal project built by Audet to monitor his own positions in the DeFi landscape.
What began as a simple dashboard evolved into a comprehensive platform after earlier projects merged, offering users a unified interface to view wallets, DeFi yield positions, NFTs, and on-chain activity across dozens of blockchains.
It also provided mobile apps and developer APIs that powered integrations for other services.
At its peak, the platform served more than two million monthly active users and processed over $13 billion in transaction volume.
Many in the crypto community viewed it as a pioneering user interface that helped make complex on-chain interactions more accessible during DeFi’s major growth periods.
In 2021, Zapper secured substantial backing, raising $15 million in a Series A round led by Framework Ventures. Investors included Mark Cuban, Sound Ventures (associated with Ashton Kutcher), Coinbase Ventures, and several other prominent firms.
The funding supported product expansion, including mobile development and broader feature sets.
Audet shared the decision with evident reflection, noting that the team had explored multiple strategic paths before determining that a structured wind-down was the most appropriate step.
All core services—including the main website at zapper.xyz, mobile applications, and API endpoints—will go offline on August 3. Existing API users will receive direct email guidance to assist with any necessary transitions.
The move comes amid broader challenges in the crypto industry, with numerous projects announcing closures this year.
In follow-up remarks, Audet indicated that shifting market demand ultimately influenced the outcome.
Users relying on Zapper for portfolio oversight are encouraged to export relevant data promptly and explore alternatives such as Zerion, DeBank, Rotki, or Octav, which provide similar tracking and analytics capabilities.
Audet also highlighted the strength of the Zapper team, noting their proven ability to scale products to millions of users while building deep expertise in on-chain engineering and operations.
He invited interested organizations to reach out directly regarding potential hiring opportunities for the group.
Zapper’s story reflects both the innovative spirit and the demanding realities of building in decentralized finance. While the platform did not fully achieve every original ambition, it played a meaningful role in lowering barriers for participants navigating the on-chain economy over its nearly seven-year run.