Avalanche printed a 3.5 million daily-transaction reading described as the highest level in the past year, while AVAX failed to reclaim the $10 pivot. On-chain usage metrics are stepping higher, but price is still trading like a downtrend asset until that level flips.
Avalanche’s on-chain activity spiked with daily transactions hitting 3.5 million, a level Nansen described as the highest in the past year. The problem for traders is simple: the network is printing usage highs while AVAX is still trading below $10, the level the report frames as the line between “bearish structure” and a potential reversal.
The same dataset tied the activity burst to a broader narrative of institutional and regulatory catalysts, including Grayscale’s launch of GAVA (an AVAX staking ETF) on Nasdaq, the SEC and CFTC classifying AVAX as a digital commodity, and Broadridge bringing proxy voting on-chain. The packet does not include primary filings or regulator documents to verify timing or specifics, so the cleanest read is still the measurable part: usage is up, price structure is not.
The transaction spike did not show up in isolation. Nansen data also showed active addresses moving from around 100,000 for most of 2025 to a new floor in the 500,000 to 700,000 range. That kind of baseline reset matters more than a single-day print because it suggests sustained throughput and participation rather than a one-off burst.
Artemis’ Sybil and Non‑Sybil metrics pointed in the same direction. Non‑Sybil users climbed from 5,000 to 49,000 over the past four months. “Sybil” activity is a heuristic for bot or multi-account behavior that can inflate headline user counts, while “non‑Sybil” attempts to isolate likely unique, real users. With transactions, active addresses, and non‑Sybil users all rising in the same window, the activity move reads like broader usage expansion rather than a one-metric anomaly.
Spot positioning looked supportive on paper. Over the past three days, AVAX recorded $49 million in outflows versus $45.9 million in inflows, and spot netflow remained negative, dropping 180% to -$3.06 million, per Coinglass data. Spot netflow is commonly used as a proxy for exchange supply pressure, where outflows can imply coins moving off venues and reduced immediate sell availability.
Order-size data added a second layer. CryptoQuant spot average order size was described as showing whale activity clustering around $9.3, with a demand wall around $8.9 and $9.3. A demand wall is simply a price zone with heavy buy orders that can absorb selling and act as support.
Still, the market’s message is that flows and bids have not been enough to change the trend regime. As long as AVAX is below $10 and under key moving averages, the tape is treating these supports as defensive positioning inside a downtrend, not the start of a new uptrend.
The threshold that matters is a daily close back above $10, and whether that move coincides with the 20-, 50-, and 100-day EMAs flipping as described in the report. EMAs are trend gauges that weight recent price more heavily, and reclaiming them tends to be the mechanical confirmation systematic traders look for.
If $10 continues to cap price, the report’s base case shifts toward consolidation risk, with a stated sideways band of $8.4 to $9.7. That makes the $8.9 to $9.3 whale zone a practical stress test: repeated retests that hold would reinforce the “bid under the market” story, while a break would imply the demand wall was thinner than it looked.
Flows are the other tell. The -$3.06 million netflow reading matters less than whether negative netflows persist or swing back to inflows. On-chain, the confirmation is durability: transactions staying near the 3.5 million/day area and active addresses holding the 500,000 to 700,000 floor rather than mean-reverting.
I treat this as a classic divergence setup: fundamentals and positioning are improving, but price is still below the level that defines the trend. Transactions at 3.5 million, a higher active- floor, and a jump in non‑Sybil users is the right kind of breadth, and it reduces the odds that the move is just bots or a single app spiking activity.
The market structure read is still bearish until $10 is reclaimed and the moving-average stack flips with it. If $10 holds as resistance, the setup looks more like a sentiment catalyst than a fundamental shift, and the practical outcome is a range market where the $8.9–$9.3 bid zone matters more than the headlines.