TL;DR
Retail crypto participation softened in early 2026 as TRM Labs reported a notable cooldown in global activity. The firm’s latest Global Crypto Adoption Index shows that retail transaction volumes fell to $979 billion in Q1, down 11 percent from the $1.1 trillion recorded a year earlier. TRM Labs attributes the slowdown to persistent macro pressures that continue to weigh on everyday users.
TRM Labs highlighted that this marks the second straight quarter of contraction, following a sharper 23% decline in late 2025. The firm noted that tighter financial conditions, reduced risk appetite, and uncertainty surrounding U.S. tariffs contributed to the pullback. TRM Labs also pointed to a strong dollar and higher real yields as factors limiting speculative activity. Bitcoin reflected these headwinds, sliding 22% over the quarter to settle near $68,000. TRM Labs emphasized that its index filters out institutional flows to focus strictly on retail behavior across more than 200 jurisdictions.
According to TRM Labs, mature economies absorbed the sharpest declines. The United States saw retail volumes fall 11 percent to $213.3 billion, while South Korea dropped 31 percent to $66.6 billion. The United Kingdom declined 13 percent, and Germany followed similar patterns. TRM Labs noted that liquidity drawdowns and higher opportunity costs reduced speculative engagement across these regions. The firm’s data suggests that retail users in developed markets responded more sharply to macro tightening than their emerging‑market counterparts.

TRM Labs found that several emerging economies maintained strong activity despite global softness. India posted only a 5% decline to $46.2 billion, supported by peer‑to‑peer platforms and expanding local exchanges. Turkey climbed the global rankings as lira depreciation fueled demand for dollar‑linked assets. Venezuela advanced to the 17th position with $17.9 billion in activity, driven by currency instability and reliance on stablecoins. TRM Labs noted that USDT dominated local retail flows in both Venezuela and Iran.
TRM Labs reported that stablecoins remained essential in high‑inflation environments. In Venezuela, USDT accounted for roughly 90% of Binance peer‑to‑peer volume. Iran showed similar patterns as users turned to USDT for savings and payments. TRM Labs also highlighted rapid growth in euro‑denominated stablecoins, which expanded twelvefold as users sought alternatives to dollar rails. The firm concluded that long‑term adoption may increasingly depend on crypto’s utility in constrained financial systems.