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Ethereum’s network scales up, but ‘failed transactions’ point to deeper issues

By Muriuki Lazaro · Published April 5, 2026 · 2 min read · Source: AMBCrypto
Ethereum
Reviewed by Reviewed by Saman Waris Updated 12:30 IST April 5, 2026 Share Share
Ethereum's network scales up, but 'failed transactions' point to deeper issues

Ethereum [ETH] shows a growing disconnect between activity and execution, as more transactions fail even while usage declines. On the 22nd of March, failed transactions reached over 700,000, pushing failure rates above 35%.

This shift matters because it removes congestion as the main cause, which means something deeper is affecting execution. Earlier spikes in December and February already pointed to this trend, showing failures rise even without heavy network load.

Source: CryptoQuant

This happens because transactions depend on user inputs, smart contract design, and network conditions. When any layer introduces friction, failures increase, especially as complexity grows across applications.

The impact builds over time, as repeated failures reduce efficiency and increase costs for users. This weakens trust in execution, which may slow adoption and limit network usage despite lower activity levels.

Ethereum demand grows, but execution friction limits engagement

This pressure now shows up in how users behave, where growth in participation no longer translates into deeper network usage. Active addresses sat at 488,000, confirming demand still enters the network.

At the same time, active addresses with contracts held near 649,691, showing steady interaction, yet the pullback from peaks suggests weakening engagement and slowing demand momentum.

Source: Glassnode

This happens as execution friction, especially failed transactions and gas inefficiencies, disrupts user experience. Retail users reduce interaction, while institutions continue but demand reliability.

As a result, network growth expands in size but not intensity, which weakens transactional momentum. This creates a gap where adoption builds but fails to compound, increasing the risk of user flow shifting to simpler ecosystems.

Ethereum scales, but usability lags

This shift in user behavior highlights a changing balance, where Ethereum grows stronger in scale but faces new limits in usability.

Most activity now moves to Layer-2 networks, which handle most of the  transactions, while costs drop sharply, removing earlier bottlenecks.

At the same time, this complexity supports more advanced use cases, which attracts institutional participation and deeper liquidity. Yet retail users often struggle with execution reliability, which slows frequent usage.

This creates a mixed outcome, where Ethereum grows in capability but risks losing simplicity. Adoption can continue, but long-term growth now depends on balancing innovation with easier execution.


Final Summary

Muriuki Lazaro is a on-chain data analyst with a B.Sc. in Data Science. Muriuki specializes in dissecting complex on-chain data into clear and accurate insights for readers in the crypto ecosystem, with a particular focus on Bitcoin.

This article was originally published on AMBCrypto and is republished here under RSS syndication for informational purposes. All rights and intellectual property remain with the original author. If you are the author and wish to have this article removed, please contact us at [email protected].

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