Bitcoin active addresses have plummeted by nearly 40% as short-term speculative demand retreats from the network, according to data released on May 26, 2026. Cryptocurrency analyst Ali Martinez noted on May 25 that the number of active Bitcoin addresses has slowed sharply in recent weeks, with unique active addresses now down 42% from their February 2021 peak. This decline suggests a cooling of user participation as the market enters what many observers identify as a consolidation or correction phase.
The contraction in on-chain activity is visible in recent tracking from CryptoQuant and Glassnode. On March 25, 2026, Bitcoin recorded 655,908 active addresses, down from 938,609 recorded on August 8, 2025. This downturn coincides with Bitcoin price analysis showing recent rejections at key resistance levels, suggesting that the lack of new buyers is making it difficult for the market to maintain momentum against sell-side pressure.
Market observers interpret this drop as a sign that short-term speculators have largely stepped aside. While Bitcoin traded around $64,401 in February, the Crypto Fear & Greed Index has since remained in extreme fear territory. As of April 8, 2026, CryptoQuant data indicates the number of active Bitcoin addresses fell to its lowest level since 2026, which also marked a nearly eight-year low for the metric.
Low speculative activity impacts on-chain demand
The drop in unique wallet interactions often serves as a signal for shifting market phases. Analyst G a a h noted that when activity drastically shrinks, it typically means short-term investors who bought in due to speculation and sold off due to panic have basically exited. This purge may leave behind a more resilient base of long-term holders, though it creates a short-term liquidity vacuum that makes price rallies difficult to sustain without fresh spot demand.
Apparent demand for Bitcoin has fallen to its most negative level since the start of the year, reaching close to -147,000 BTC. Analyst Darkfost suggested that a sustained rally is unlikely without a recovery in spot demand. While Bitcoin exchange supply maintains multi-year lows, the current lack of active address growth suggests that the scarcity of coins is not yet meeting enough buying pressure to trigger a definitive breakout.
This period of low volatility and reduced speculative interest often provide conditions for “smart money” to operate. Institutional investors frequently use these quiet phases to accumulate positions without triggering abnormal price fluctuations. However, the consequence for the network is a decline in transaction fees and daily miner revenue, which fell from $50 million in Q3 2025 to approximately $40 million as of December 16, 2025.
Technical support levels and market sentiment
Technical indicators are currently flashing warning signs for short-term traders. As of May 25, 2026, Bitcoin’s Relative Strength Index (RSI) sits at 33.84, accompanied by a negative Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD). Analysts have identified potential support at $76,900, with the possibility of a recovery to $78,800 or an anticipated decline to $74,900 if support fails.
The reduction in activity and revenue reflects broader industry pressure following the most recent block reward halving. With fewer transactions to process and lower fees being paid, miners are increasingly reliant on the underlying price of Bitcoin. While Ethereum network activity has shifted toward AI-driven decentralized exchanges, Bitcoin continues to see a divergence between its price and measurable on-chain adoption.
Long-term investors remain dominant during consolidation
Despite the bearish signal from declining address activity, some analysts view the current environment as a structural reset. Data shows that long-term holders have distributed about 15.2 million Bitcoin in the current cycle, representing a large-scale transfer of wealth from older participants to newer entities. Darkfost described this pessimistic sentiment as an “interesting environment” for patient long-term investors who prioritize accumulation over short-term metrics.
The divergence between Bitcoin’s price and its measurable network adoption remains a point of debate. Historical data shows a positive correlation between active addresses and price, and a sustained period of low activity could indicate a deep consolidation phase. Currently, the Long-Term Holder Net Unrealized Profit and Loss (NUPL) indicator stands at 0.36, suggesting the market is not yet in the euphoric phase that usually precedes a cycle peak.
For the network to regain its previous peak of over 938,000 active addresses, there must be a resurgence in spot market demand. The “hodling” strategy currently adopted by many participants further reduces address activity by keeping coins static in cold storage. Until retail interest returns, the market trajectory will likely be determined by institutional accumulation and the activity of long-term whales.
