Ethereum Tightens Its Grip on Onchain Credit Markets

Ethereum is quietly reinforcing its position as the backbone of onchain lending and borrowing, pulling decisively ahead of every competing network.

According to Token Terminal data, active loans across Ethereum-based lending platforms have climbed to around $28 billion, marking a dramatic expansion from the lows seen in early 2023.

What stands out is not just the absolute size of this figure, but the gap it creates.

Ethereum now supports roughly 10 times more active loan value than any other blockchain, a spread that has widened steadily over the past year rather than narrowing as new networks scaled.

The chart shows that while alternative chains experienced brief lending spikes during previous market cycles, most failed to sustain meaningful activity. Ethereum, by contrast, rebuilt from the bear-market reset and pushed to new cycle highs, with lending growth accelerating again into 2025 and early 2026.

“Active loans” measure the value of assets currently borrowed and accruing interest, making it a more accurate reflection of real economic usage than deposits alone.

In this context, Ethereum’s dominance suggests that large-scale, interest-generating credit activity continues to concentrate where liquidity, risk management, and protocol depth are deepest.

The takeaway is structural rather than speculative. Onchain lending at scale has become increasingly capital-intensive, and the data implies that serious borrowers and lenders still converge on Ethereum when size and reliability matter.

Until that changes, rival networks remain participants, but not true competitors, in the onchain credit economy.

The post Ethereum Tightens Its Grip on Onchain Credit Markets appeared first on ETHNews.


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