CryptoQuant reported on 18 June 2026 that Bitcoin’s network activity has climbed to within 7% of its September 2024 record and broken above its long-term trend for the first time since mid-2024, driven by a flood of sub-0.01 BTC microtransactions rather than economic payments.

The firm’s Network Activity Index has risen steadily since January 2026 to its highest reading since late 2024, holding above trend through several weeks of green-shaded territory that began in late March. That run marks the first positive activity regime since mid-2024, and it has built even as Bitcoin grinds near $62,000 through one of the deepest demand contractions of the cycle.

Source: CryptoQuant

Total daily Bitcoin transactions have pushed above 800,000 in 2026, more than doubling from 2025 lows and approaching the peak readings of the 2023–2025 cycle, while mean transactions per block have climbed alongside them. Both metrics have stayed elevated long enough for CryptoQuant to call the surge structural rather than a short-lived spike.

Inscription Protocols Fuel the Surge

The economic content of these transactions separates the current run from earlier high-activity periods, with almost the entire increase sitting in the lowest value cohorts. The sub-0.001 BTC and sub-0.01 BTC tiers now account for roughly 80% of all daily transactions, up from about 44% in 2023.

That shift tracks a near-record rise in OP_RETURN opcode usage, the output type data-inscription protocols use to write arbitrary information into Bitcoin blocks. CryptoQuant attributed the spike primarily to Runes, which move fungible tokens through OP_RETURN outputs, alongside Ordinals and BRC-20 activity and data-timestamping services.

Source: CryptoQuant

These protocols generate high volumes of dust-value transfers, some as low as 546 satoshis, which maps directly onto the low-value cohort expansion. The same inscription traffic has revived a governance fight, after an Ordinals developer floated forking Bitcoin Core over moves to restrict OP_RETURN data and non-financial transactions.

Congestion Builds in the Mempool

The microtransaction wave has pushed the Bitcoin mempool transaction count to 128,000, its highest level since late February 2025, with the backlog concentrated in low-fee cohorts that match the OP_RETURN and micro-transfer profile. Current depth remains well below the extreme peaks of September 2023 and November 2024, yet the reading confirms that non-financial activity is consuming a growing share of Bitcoin throughput.

The report noted that sustained expansion at these levels could push fees higher for time-sensitive economic transactions competing for the same space. The throughput story runs against the capital picture, with spot Bitcoin and Ether funds shedding more than $528 million in net outflows on June 1 and institutional desks still framing the cycle through flows rather than on-chain volume, where $150,000 stands as the base-case year-end target tied to ETF demand.