WikiBit 2025-12-08 05:03According to metrics, the tally of ETH burned from fees has sailed past the 6 million mark, meaning
According to metrics, the tally of ETH burned from fees has sailed past the 6 million mark, meaning that as of Dec. 7s exchange rates, more than $18 billion in value has effectively gone up in smoke since the London hard fork on Aug. 5, 2021.
ETH Bonfire Surpasses 6M ETH Since 2021s London Upgrade
Just recently, Ethereum rolled out its Fusaka upgrade, which dramatically expanded the networks data and gas capacity (think higher block gas limits and far larger blob space), allowing each block to haul more call data and rollup blobs.
The Fusaka upgrade reshaped layer two (L2) fees and, by extension, offered a helping hand to onchain (L1) gas costs as well. Onchain fees on Ethereum are impressively low — dipping under a single gwei, according to etherscan.ios gas tracker.
At 11 a.m. Eastern time on Dec. 7, a low-priority fee hovered near 0.305 gwei, while a high-priority fee clocked in around 0.326 gwei. That places transfer costs somewhere between $0.005 and $0.02 on Sunday, while smart contract moves like swaps, NFT sales, or bridging run anywhere from $0.14 to $0.50 per action.
When the London hard fork arrived in August 2021, it brought EIP-1559 with it—a full makeover of Ethereums transaction fee mechanics that introduced a dynamic base fee, automatically burned and gone for good with every block.
The fork landed 4 years, 4 months, and 2 days ago (leap year quirks included), and since then, 6.1 million ETH valued at $18 billion has been erased from circulation. Metrics from ultrasound.money reveal that blob fees have taken the crown as the biggest ETH burner, wiping out 1,492,094 ETH on their own.
Traditional ether transfers follow with 377,388 ETH torched, while the non-fungible token (NFT) marketplace Opensea is responsible for 230,051.12 ETH reduced to digital ashes. The decentralized exchange (DEX) Uniswap v2 isnt far behind, with 227,337.27 ETH burned, and tether ( USDT) usage clocks in with 211,342.55 ETH eliminated. Closing out the top five, Uniswap v1 has erased an additional 153,585.62 ETH since 2021.
Despite the 6.1 million ETH burned, stats over the past four years still show the network running inflationary at 0.800% per year. Since the London hard fork, roughly 4,065,657 ETH have been added to the supply. Under the proof-of-stake (PoS) model, issuance has eased compared with what it would be under proof-of-work (PoW). If Ethereum were still operating on PoW system, simulated data shows the annual inflation rate would sit at 3.499%, and a hefty 16,931,820 ETH would have been added to circulation.
While PoS is keeping issuance on a tighter leash, Ethereum‘s supply still creeps slowly upward, reminding everyone that deflationary dreams aren’t automatic. Despite this, the network has come a long way since the London hard fork, cutting potential inflation dramatically compared with its old PoW days.
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