The blockchain industry is entering a new phase of maturity as real, user-driven activity begins to outpace speculation, according to fresh data from venture capital firm 1kx.
Blockchain Fees Hit $19.8 Billion in 2025
The 1kx Onchain Revenue Report projects that total user-paid blockchain fees will reach $19.8 billion by the end of 2025, nearly doubling from $9.7 billion in the first half of the year.
These revenues include transaction, trading, gaming, and subscription fees across decentralized finance (DeFi), consumer apps, and tokenized asset platforms.
While 2025 may fall short of the record $24.1 billion in 2021, it still represents a tenfold increase since 2020, with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of around 60% — a clear sign that blockchain usage is expanding beyond speculation into sustainable economic activity.
“We view fees paid as the best indicator of repeatable utility — real value that users and firms are willing to pay for,” wrote report authors Lasse Clausen, Christopher Heymann, Robert Koschig, Clare He, and Johannes Säuberlich.
From Speculation to Real Utility
The report emphasizes that rising fee revenue reflects a structural shift in the crypto economy.
As protocols mature and regulation strengthens, networks capable of generating consistent onchain revenue will emerge as the most durable, distinguishing themselves from early-stage experimental projects.
This transition highlights blockchain’s growing role in powering real-world applications, from tokenized finance and infrastructure networks (DePINs) to wallet-based consumer ecosystems.
“The ability to generate and distribute consistent fee revenue will separate durable networks from experiments,” the report stated.
Tokenized Real-World Assets Drive Growth
One of the standout drivers of this revenue boom is real-world asset (RWA) tokenization.
The onchain value of tokenized RWAs (excluding stablecoins) has surged past $35 billion, up from $28 billion in the third quarter of 2025, according to RWA.xyz data.
The 1kx report notes that fees from these tokenized assets are growing even faster than the assets themselves — a strong indicator of increased user engagement and institutional adoption.
Leading financial institutions such as JPMorgan, BlackRock, and BNY Mellon are deepening their involvement:
- JPMorgan recently tokenized one of its private equity funds on its Kinexys blockchain.
- BNY Mellon has partnered with Securitize to bring collateralized loan obligations (CLOs) onchain.
A Defining Maturity Test for Crypto
The surge in onchain fees underscores that crypto is evolving from a speculative arena into a revenue-generating digital economy.
For investors and developers alike, the focus is shifting toward sustainable network economics, user retention, and real-world financial integration.
If current trends continue, 2025 may be remembered not just for bull runs or regulatory milestones — but as the year blockchain proved its staying power as a functioning, fee-driven ecosystem.
Disclaimer
This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Cryptocurrency trading involves risk and may result in financial loss.

