The year 2025 was supposed to be the great crossover. The moment when Bitcoin (BTC) would finally shed its skin as a mere speculative vehicle and digital cash. The headlines were compelling: The Lightning Network cracked $1.17 billion in monthly volume, Square rolled out Bitcoin payments to 4 million merchants, and the Swiss city of Lugano let citizens pay taxes in BTC. The numbers suggested we were witnessing the infrastructure for a new global economy.
But peel back the layers of on-chain data and examine how people actually transact, and a starkly different picture emerges. The uncomfortable truth is that genuine peer-to-peer commerce with Bitcoin remains a niche activity, dwarfed by speculation, institutional arbitrage, and localized experiments. While the foundations are being laid, the assertion that Bitcoin is a widely used payment system remains more aspiration than reality.
The most alarming signal for Bitcoin maximalists is the “usage cliff” appearing in on-chain data. As of April 2026, the average daily transaction volume on the Bitcoin network is at its lowest point since the beginning of 2025. Despite a price rally that briefly touched $127,000 in October 2025, the number of daily active addresses has collapsed by nearly 42% since February 2021. New address creation, a key metric for grassroots user adoption, has plummeted by approximately 47% over the same five-year period.

This is not a temporary blip; it is a multi-year trend of user attrition. The network is consolidating, not expanding. The activity that does exist is overwhelmingly dominated by large entities—whales and institutional investors—shuffling funds between exchanges, not individuals buying coffee or paying bills. As analysts noted, large players are adopting a “wait-and-see” approach, leading to “extreme apathy” and low liquidity within the base blockchain.
Proponents often counter by pointing to the Lightning Network, Bitcoin’s Layer-2 scaling solution, which processed an estimated $1.17 billion in November 2025. At face value, this suggests a booming economy of fast, low-cost transactions. However, the composition of that volume tells a very different story.
The average Lightning transaction in November 2025 was $223, up from $118 the previous year. This is not the domain of micropayments; it resembles everyday consumer spending levels. But the reality is more corporate: analysts attribute the surge not to retail commerce, but to exchange settlements. The network is increasingly being used as a settlement rail for institutions, not as a point-of-sale solution. The “digital cash” narrative is being replaced by a “digital settlement” reality.
If the raw data is discouraging, the real-world case studies offer a more nuanced but still limited view.
If Bitcoin is to truly scale as a payment system, three structural barriers remain evident.
It would be intellectually dishonest to claim that Bitcoin payments are a complete failure. The infrastructure is more robust than ever. The Lightning Network is capable. Major platforms process millions of transactions annually. Cities like Lugano prove the technology works.
However, the data suggests the infrastructure is serving a different purpose than advertised. Most “payment” volume reflects institutional churn and exchange arbitrage. Merchant adoption is growing, but transaction volume remains small relative to traditional finance.
Until tax reform emerges, volatility stabilizes, and spending incentives outweigh hoarding, Bitcoin will likely remain a volatile asset class that occasionally functions as money. The revolution is not absent — it is simply delayed, constrained by policy, incentives, and market behavior.