- Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade improves infrastructure, but failed to spark sustained user growth or onboarding.
- Reduced churn and sporadic activity spikes suggest improved user retention, but widespread adoption remains uncertain.
Ethereum’s [ETH] Pectra upgrade was expected to reignite momentum across the network. Yet, growth has stalled, and user activity is tapering off across several key metrics.
While the lull raises short-term concerns, a notable drop in user churn points to stronger retention, offering a more nuanced outlook for Ethereum’s long-term trajectory.
The Pectra upgrade
Ethereum’s Pectra upgrade, launched earlier this month, combined the Prague and Electra proposals to enhance validator performance, gas efficiency, and account abstraction.
While it introduced important technical improvements for developers and node operators, the broader user base has shown little interest.
Unlike the Dencun upgrade, Pectra did not trigger a spike in network activity, highlighting a growing gap between backend advancements and front-end adoption.
No network activity surge?
Despite Ethereum’s successful Pectra upgrade, network activity remains sluggish. Glassnode reports a 1.8% drop in new addresses and an 8.4% decline in resurrected addresses compared to year-to-date averages.
This suggests weak onboarding and limited user re-engagement.
However, ETH ‘churned’ has also been down by 8.5%, suggesting existing users are sticking around longer.
While network activity appears stagnant, this shift toward stronger retention may be a sign of a healthier, more stable user base forming beneath the surface of Ethereum’s cooling engagement metrics.
ETH’s flash in the pan?
Ethereum Daily Active Addresses have seen sharp increases since early May, but the pattern remains erratic.
Santiment data shows that while engagement briefly surged, peaking above 555K addresses, activity has been volatile, with frequent dips and recoveries. At the same time, short-term holders also spiked, hinting at speculative behavior rather than long-term conviction.
This aligns with broader post-Pectra trends. The uptick may reflect short-term reactions rather than a durable shift in user behavior or network utility.