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Bitcoin Wallet Activity Hits Record High; Exchange Balances Fall to 2017 Levels - Crypto Economy
TL;DR:
The Bitcoin network has never had as many users as it does today. As of March 6, 2026, the number of non-empty wallets reached 58.45 million, a historic high that surpasses the peaks recorded during the bull markets of 2021 and 2025. At the same time, the supply available on known exchanges fell to 1.17 million BTC, the lowest figure since December 2017. The fact that both indicators are moving in the same direction simultaneously is no coincidence.
The wallet count grew 3% in six months, adding 1.69 million new addresses with a balance since September 2025. A non-empty wallet is the most basic measure of adoption: someone created it, deposited funds, and did not withdraw them. The fact that this number is the highest in the network’s history indicates that the number of individual holders continues to expand.

Exchange Supply: Less Bitcoin Ready to Sell
The drop in supply on exchanges is a different but complementary reading. BTC deposited on exchanges is, by definition, the most accessible for immediate sale. When that figure falls, potential selling pressure decreases. The 1.17 million figure brings to mind December 2017, the month Bitcoin reached its all-time high at the time, near $20,000, before a prolonged bear market The analogy is not directly bullish, but the supply dynamic it describes is.
According to data from Santiment, the exchange supply line showed a consistent decline even during February’s volatility, a month in which Bitcoin recorded a monthly drop of 14.94%. Users did not move their funds to exchanges during the downturn. In many cases, they continued withdrawing. That behavior during a negative month carries a different weight than the same behavior during a rally.

Real Adoption, No Price Guarantees
The net outflow of 28,700 BTC recorded on March 4 fits within that eight-month pattern Single-day outflows are noise; eight months of sustained decline are a trend.
That said, it is worth noting that low exchange supply and a high number of wallets have historically coexisted with both bull and bear markets. These indicators describe positioning and adoption, not price direction.
What they do rule out is the idea that Bitcoin adoption is slowing down or that holders are preparing to distribute. Neither theory finds support in this data. What is visible is a network with more participants than ever and less immediately sellable supply than at any point in the last eight years.