Bitcoin’s on-chain activity has entered a critical zone, signaling a sharp deterioration in network participation following the loss of the $83,000 support level.
According to CryptoQuant data, the 7-day SMA of Bitcoin active addresses has fallen to roughly 720,000, marking the lowest reading since April 2020.
This represents a dramatic contraction in usage. As recently as November 2024, the same metric stood near 1.126 million active addresses, highlighting a steep decline in engagement over a relatively short period.
The return to 2020-level network activity is notable not because of price, but because of context. In April 2020, Bitcoin was emerging from a global liquidity crisis with prices under $10,000. Today, Bitcoin is trading near $77,000, yet on-chain participation mirrors levels from that earlier, far smaller market.
This mismatch points to a structural imbalance: valuation remains elevated while actual network usage has regressed sharply.
The drop in active addresses closely followed Bitcoin’s decisive breakdown below $83,000, a level that had previously acted as a key support zone. Since then, price has drifted lower, while network activity has continued to deteriorate rather than stabilize.
This creates a deep bearish divergence:
Such divergences typically indicate weak organic demand, where price is being sustained more by positioning, liquidity conditions, or derivatives activity than by genuine user participation.
From the November 2024 peak, active addresses have declined by roughly 36%, pointing to a meaningful withdrawal of participants from the network. This suggests fading retail engagement and reduced transactional demand throughout late 2025 and early 2026.
Periods of declining active addresses often coincide with prolonged consolidation or further downside, as fewer users are present to absorb selling pressure or support recoveries.
The combination of:
raises the risk that near-term rebounds could lack durability. Without a reversal in active address trends, upside attempts may struggle to gain traction and could devolve into short-lived relief rallies rather than sustained recoveries.
For now, Bitcoin appears to be in a phase where network participation must recover before price structure can meaningfully improve. Until on-chain activity shows signs of renewed growth, the market remains vulnerable to further instability.
The post Bitcoin Active Addresses Collapse to 2020 Lows After $83K Breakdown appeared first on ETHNews.



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