Token Terminal data tracking median Ethereum transaction fees from December 2017 through March 2026 shows the network’s fee environment has collapsed from a peak above $25 per transaction during the 2021 to 2022 NFT boom to near-zero levels today, marking one of the most dramatic shifts in blockchain network economics visible across any major chain’s history.
The Token Terminal chart covers eight years of Ethereum median transaction fee data on a single graph. From December 2017 through approximately January 2020, fees were effectively flat near zero, reflecting a network that was technically operational but not under meaningful demand pressure. The line barely registers above the baseline across the entire two-year window.
The first significant fee event is visible around 2020, where median fees begin rising from near zero toward the $1 to $5 range as DeFi activity started generating sustained on-chain demand. That rise continued and accelerated through 2021 as NFT trading volumes exploded and every major DeFi protocol attracted billions in liquidity simultaneously.
The peak is annotated precisely on the chart. Median transaction fees hit above $25 at the moment OpenSea raised $300 million at a $13.3 billion valuation. That funding round, completed in January 2022, marked the apex of NFT market speculation. Every wallet interacting with Ethereum at that moment was competing for block space with thousands of other transactions, and the auction-based fee mechanism pushed median costs to levels that made simple transfers unaffordable for ordinary users.
From that peak, the decline was sustained but not immediate. Fees remained elevated through mid-2022 before collapsing as NFT trading volume dried up and the broader crypto market entered its bear phase. Two smaller fee spikes are visible later in the chart, one around early 2024 reaching approximately $10 and another smaller one later in 2024, both corresponding to periods of renewed on-chain activity during the Bitcoin ETF launch period and the subsequent altcoin season. By early 2026, the line has returned to near the baseline it occupied before the NFT era began.
The fee chart is a demand chart. Ethereum transaction fees are not set by the protocol in a fixed way. They are determined by how many users are competing for the same block space at the same time. When fees are high, the network is congested and demand is intense. When fees are near zero, the network has excess capacity relative to current demand.
The 2022 peak was not a sign of Ethereum’s health in isolation. It was a sign of unsustainable demand concentrated in a single use case. NFT minting and trading generated a wave of transactions that the base layer could not process efficiently, creating fee conditions that priced out legitimate users and made the network functionally unusable for anything requiring low costs. OpenSea’s funding round at that exact moment was both a product of the same speculative environment and a marker of its apex.
The current near-zero fee environment reflects two simultaneous developments. Demand has declined from the NFT peak across every major use category. Layer 2 networks including Arbitrum, Base, Optimism, and Polygon have absorbed a significant portion of the transaction volume that would previously have competed for Ethereum base layer block space. Both factors reduce base layer fees. Whether that combination represents a healthier, more scalable Ethereum or a less economically active one depends on how Layer 2 fee revenue flows back to the base layer over time.
As covered in earlier reporting today, Hyperliquid generated more fee revenue in 24 hours than Ethereum, Solana, and Bitcoin combined. That data point and the Token Terminal chart belong in the same conversation. Ethereum’s fee compression is not happening in a vacuum. It is happening as competitor chains and application-specific networks capture activity that would previously have defaulted to Ethereum’s base layer. The 2022 peak represented Ethereum as the only serious option for on-chain economic activity at scale. The 2026 baseline represents a market with significantly more infrastructure options available to users and developers.
Whether Ethereum recaptures that fee density through Layer 2 activity feeding back to the base layer through staking and blob fees is the central economic question for the network’s long-term value proposition. The chart does not answer that question. It documents how far the current environment is from the one that made Ethereum a fee machine four years ago.
The post Ethereum Transaction Fees Are Near Zero Compared to 2022: The NFT Era Made It a Fee Machine and That Era Is Over appeared first on ETHNews.

