Ethereum is quietly hitting an important milestone.

Daily transactions on the network have climbed past 2 million, surpassing peaks from the 2021 bull market — but this time, activity is rising while gas fees are falling, not spiking.

Thanks to recent upgrades like EIP-4844 and expanded blob capacity, the cost for Layer 2 networks to post data on Ethereum has dropped significantly. That efficiency has filtered down to users, pushing average gas fees to multi-year lows, even as usage increases.

What’s driving the activity?

Stablecoins remain the dominant force. Transfers involving USDT and USDC now make up the majority of Ethereum transactions, signaling that the network is being used more for payments, transfers, and real onchain activity — not just speculation.

On the staking side, confidence in the network is also rising. Ethereum’s validator exit queue has dropped to zero, while over 2.6 million ETH is waiting to enter staking — the largest entry queue since mid-2023. Roughly 30% of ETH’s total supply is now staked, reinforcing long-term commitment to the network.

The takeaway is simple:

Ethereum is doing what mature infrastructure is supposed to do — handle more demand at lower cost.

As crypto continues to evolve, moments like this matter more than short-term price moves. Growing usage, improving efficiency, and real economic activity are what ultimately support long-term adoption.

And while networks get faster and cheaper behind the scenes, there are still plenty of ways to stay active — and earning — across the ecosystem.