A ten-year Santiment dataset tracking non-empty wallet counts across crypto’s largest assets shows Ethereum’s holder base has gone parabolic relative to every other network, reaching 182.74 million non-empty wallets while Bitcoin sits at 58.51 million and the gap continues widening.
Ethereum’s 182.74 million non-empty wallets represent 3.12 times Bitcoin’s 58.51 million. Against Tether’s 12.96 million wallets the multiple reaches 14.1x. The rest of the tracked assets sit in a narrow band well below all three: XRP at 7.68 million, DOGE at 8.22 million, USDC at 6.18 million, ADA at 4.61 million, and LINK at 856,700.
Source: https://x.com/santimentfeed/status/2031600261647442406
The wallet count hierarchy does not follow market cap rankings. Bitcoin is the largest asset by market cap but third in holder count. Ethereum leads despite trading at a fraction of Bitcoin’s price and underperforming significantly on a year-to-date basis. DOGE has more non-empty wallets than XRP despite XRP’s higher market cap. Holder count and market cap describe different things about the same assets.
Santiment marks February 11, 2019 as the date Ethereum surpassed Bitcoin in total holders. That crossing point is visible on the chart as the moment the yellow Ethereum line moved above the red Bitcoin line and began pulling away. The subsequent divergence was not immediate. Through 2019 and 2020 the two lines ran relatively close. The parabolic separation began in 2021 and has not reversed.
The mechanism behind Ethereum’s holder count growth is structural rather than speculative. Every ERC-20 token holder, every stablecoin user whose USDC or USDT balance sits in an Ethereum wallet, every DeFi participant, every NFT buyer, and every layer-2 user who bridges back to the base chain creates or maintains a non-empty Ethereum wallet. The network’s role as the settlement and issuance layer for the broader crypto ecosystem accumulates holders as a byproduct of its infrastructure function rather than through direct ETH demand alone.
The timing of Santiment’s data publication adds a specific irony to the week’s coverage. The CryptoQuant analysis published earlier today showed Ethereum generating less fee revenue than Tron, Solana, Polygon, and Base over the past 30 days. Capital outflows from ETH have turned the one-year realized capitalization negative. The token is down 30% over six months.
The network has 182.74 million non-empty wallets and is losing fee revenue to its own layer-2 ecosystem. Both facts are true. The holder count reflects the breadth of Ethereum’s ecosystem adoption. The fee and price data reflects where value capture is occurring within that ecosystem. Ethereum built infrastructure that 182 million wallets depend on. Extracting proportional value from that dependency is the problem the network has not solved.
A holder count that is parabolic and a price that is not are pointing in different directions simultaneously. Santiment’s chart is the most compelling argument for Ethereum’s long-term network effects. This week’s fee and flow data is the most compelling argument that network effects alone do not determine price.
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