Ethereum’s layer-1 real-world asset (RWA) market cap and transaction counts have both reached all-time highs, according to Token Terminal, signaling a notable acceleration in tokenized asset activity on the network’s base layer.
Real-world assets refer to traditional financial instruments, such as treasury bills, bonds, commodities, and private credit, that have been tokenized and brought on-chain. The milestone tracked by Token Terminal focuses specifically on Ethereum L1, excluding activity on layer-2 rollups and sidechains.
Ethereum L1 RWA Market Cap Hits a New High
Token Terminal flagged the record in its newsletter covering what it called “the silent winners of 2025,” highlighting issuers that have quietly grown their on-chain footprint. The all-time high in RWA market cap suggests that the total value of tokenized assets settled directly on Ethereum has never been larger.
The growth comes at a time when Ethereum’s base layer has also seen broader transaction activity pick up. A separate report noted that Ethereum weekly transactions recently hit 17.3 million as gas fees dropped to record lows, creating favorable conditions for on-chain settlement of tokenized assets.
Transaction Growth Shows Rising Ethereum RWA Activity
Alongside the market cap milestone, Token Terminal’s data shows that RWA-related transaction counts on Ethereum L1 have also reached a new peak. Rising transaction volume paired with rising market cap indicates that participation is broadening, not just that existing holders are seeing price appreciation.
Transaction activity is a useful complement to market cap because it reflects actual network usage. A high market cap with flat transactions could suggest passive holding, while simultaneous growth in both metrics points to active issuance, redemption, or trading of tokenized assets.
The trend aligns with broader institutional interest in tokenized finance. Stablecoin growth has been a related catalyst, with Coinbase’s USDC holdings hitting a record $19 billion in Q1 2026, underscoring rising demand for regulated on-chain dollar instruments.
Why the Token Terminal Data Matters for the Ethereum Narrative
Token Terminal has separately examined which chains and issuers are leading in the RWA space, and Ethereum’s base layer continues to hold a dominant share. The simultaneous records in both market cap and transactions reinforce Ethereum L1’s position as the primary settlement layer for tokenized real-world assets.
The milestone also arrives amid ongoing discussions about Ethereum’s evolving role. Vitalik Buterin recently said the Ethereum Foundation is taking a leaner operational role, while the network’s technical roadmap continues to prioritize scalability improvements that could further reduce costs for on-chain asset settlement.
Broader crypto ecosystem activity has also reflected growing interest in cross-chain tokenization infrastructure, with projects like Ripple recently joining a $6 million funding round for Squid, a cross-chain liquidity protocol. Such moves suggest that demand for on-chain asset transfer capabilities extends well beyond a single network.
For now, Token Terminal’s data marks a concrete high-water point for Ethereum L1’s tokenized asset ecosystem, grounded in both value and usage metrics rather than speculation.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.




