NFT marketplaces that once processed billions now face widespread closures. Several leading platforms announced shutdowns or ownership transfers within days.
According to reports shared on social media, the exits signal the end of a major digital art cycle. Market data confirms a sharp collapse in trading activity. The shift reflects structural problems in business models and NFT infrastructure.
Gemini announced the closure of Nifty Gateway on January 24, according to platform statements. The company later extended withdrawal deadlines after community responses. About 650,000 NFTs must be moved off the platform.
Three days later, Foundation transferred ownership to digital display firm BlackDove, the source said. Rodeo, a social NFT app, also confirmed a full shutdown during the same week.
Earlier exits set the pattern. MakersPlace closed in January 2025. KnownOrigin shut down in July 2024 after eBay acquired it in 2022. Async Art stopped operations in October 2023.
Christie’s closed its digital art department in September 2025, according to company comments. Kraken NFT, Bybit NFT, and X2Y2 also ended services in 2025. LG terminated its Art Lab project.
Data from DappRadar shows art NFT trading volume dropped from $2.9 billion in 2021 to $23.8 million in early 2025. That equals a 93 percent decline.
Art NFT trading volume drops, Source: X
Average NFT prices followed the same path. Prices peaked at $2,044 in 2021 and fell to $475 by 2023. Active traders decreased from over 529,000 in 2022 to fewer than 20,000.
Medved reported that many platforms depended on continuous collector growth. Once demand faded, operating costs exceeded revenue. Engineering, compliance, and hosting expenses remained high.
The shift exposed a mismatch between startup economics and cultural markets. Platforms scaled for transaction volume rather than long-term artistic communities.
Infrastructure problems worsened the collapse. Many NFTs store artwork and metadata on centralized servers, not directly on blockchains.
A Pinata analysis found that 27 percent of top collections relied on centralized hosting. Some metadata links already disappeared, the report said.
Amazon Web Services removed hosting for multiple NFT projects in 2024 due to policy violations. When servers go offline, NFTs point to missing files.
Even IPFS offers limited permanence. Files disappear unless users keep paying to pin them. If platforms shut down, artworks may vanish.
Artists like XCOPY lost early works when platforms such as Ascribe and Digital Objects closed. Collectors now call these pieces “lost XCOPYs,” according to published interviews.
Nifty Gateway responded by moving metadata to Arweave. However, the platform confirmed that some older NFTs cannot migrate.
Only a few platforms continue operating. OpenSea consolidated most remaining Ethereum NFT volume by late 2025, according to onchain data.
Blur gained volume through token incentives but lost activity after rewards ended. Magic Eden expanded to multiple chains but suffered technical failures after its token launch.
SuperRare remains active and opened a physical gallery in New York. Objkt now aggregates Tezos-based art after earlier platform failures.
Foundation stated that its contracts remain immutable under BlackDove management. Responsibility for content hosting shifted to the new owner.
Gondi, an NFT lending protocol, expanded rapidly between 2023 and 2026. The platform now dominates peer-to-peer NFT-backed loans.
Digital art galleries gained ground as marketplaces declined. Art Basel Miami Beach introduced a digital art sector in December. Organizers reported strong early sales.
The NFT marketplace era continues to unwind. Technology remains, but business models changed. What survives now operates on smaller scale and narrower focus.
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