Ethereum NFT trading has suddenly picked up, with Bored Ape Yacht Club leading one of the strongest short-term blue-chip moves in months.
According to WEEX’s report on CryptoSlam data, NFT trading volume on Ethereum reached about $3.934 million over a 24-hour period, up 72.78%. The same report said BAYC volume climbed above $1.45 million, marking a 266.35% jump, while Courtyard saw roughly $980,000 in volume, up 88.1%.
The headline number is eye-catching, but the better story is what it says about the state of the NFT market in 2026. This does not look like a full return to the speculative mania of 2021 and 2022. It looks more like concentrated activity flowing back into recognisable collections when liquidity improves.
BAYC Is Still the Collection Traders Watch First
A Sharp Move From a Much Lower Base
Bored Ape Yacht Club remains one of the most closely watched Ethereum NFT collections because it has become a kind of market thermometer. When traders want to know whether risk appetite is returning to NFTs, BAYC is usually one of the first places they look.
Live market trackers show why the recent move matters. CoinGecko data recently showed BAYC with a floor price near 10.8 ETH, a market cap around $249 million, and 24-hour volume near $1.73 million. OpenSea also showed BAYC’s 24-hour volume around 729 ETH, with the collection still holding more than 5,600 unique owners.
Those figures suggest the latest jump is not just a few isolated trades. It reflects renewed activity in one of Ethereum’s most liquid NFT collections.
Still, context matters. BAYC is nowhere near its 2022 peak, when floor prices briefly climbed above 100 ETH and celebrity-driven NFT demand dominated crypto culture. Today’s rebound is happening in a colder, more selective market where buyers are paying closer attention to liquidity, brand durability and entry price.
The Blue-Chip NFT Trade Is Changing
The BAYC move also shows how the blue-chip NFT trade has changed. In the last cycle, traders often bought profile-picture collections because prices were rising and social status was part of the appeal. In this cycle, the argument is more cautious.
Buyers are looking at whether older collections still have active holders, recognisable brands, deep liquidity and enough cultural relevance to survive beyond the hype period. BAYC still has those advantages, but it also carries the burden of extremely high expectations from the previous bull market.
That makes the current rebound interesting, but not automatically bullish. A 24-hour volume spike can show renewed demand, but it does not prove a lasting market recovery by itself.
Courtyard Shows NFT Demand Is Broader Than Profile Pictures
WEEX also highlighted Courtyard, which saw close to $980,000 in 24-hour volume. That is important because Courtyard is not simply another avatar collection. Its growth points to a broader shift in NFT demand toward collectibles that connect digital ownership with real-world or more familiar asset categories.
CryptoSlam data has shown Courtyard generating strong April activity, with monthly sales far above March levels. That helps explain why NFT trading is becoming less dependent on old profile-picture collections alone.
The healthiest version of an NFT recovery would not be one collection rising in isolation. It would be a market where blue-chip Ethereum collections, gaming assets, real-world collectible projects and marketplace-native assets all attract different types of buyers.
Why the Data Does Not Tell One Simple Story
There is one important caution for readers. NFT data can vary significantly between platforms such as CryptoSlam, CoinGecko, OpenSea and DappRadar. Differences can come from timing, wash-trade filters, marketplace coverage, currency conversion and whether a platform tracks sales volume, trading volume, floor price or unique transactions.
That is why the best way to read the latest BAYC spike is not as a perfect single number, but as a directional signal. Multiple trackers show stronger activity around BAYC, even if the exact dollar figure differs from source to source.
For traders, that distinction matters. Volume can rise quickly when a few high-value NFTs change hands. A healthier recovery would also show rising buyer counts, deeper bid support, stronger floors and activity across several collections rather than only one or two names.
What This Means for the NFT Market
The latest Ethereum NFT activity suggests the market may be entering a more mature phase. The easy-money era of celebrity mints and overnight floor-price pumps has faded. What remains is a smaller market where liquidity concentrates around collections that still have strong brand recognition or clear utility.
That can be positive for the sector. A more selective NFT market may be less exciting than the peak mania, but it is also less likely to reward every project equally. Collections now have to prove why they deserve attention.
BAYC’s latest volume surge shows traders have not forgotten the old blue chips. Courtyard’s rise shows newer categories can still attract capital. Together, they suggest NFT demand is not dead, but it is more disciplined than before.
What Comes Next
The next signal to watch is whether BAYC can hold its stronger floor price and trading activity over several days, not just one 24-hour window. Sustained buyer demand would be more meaningful than a short burst of volume.
The second signal is whether Ethereum NFT volume continues to expand beyond BAYC. If CryptoPunks, Pudgy Penguins, Mutant Ape Yacht Club and newer collectible projects also see stronger bids, the market could start to look healthier.
For now, the NFT market has delivered a clear reminder. Even after a long downturn, liquidity can return quickly when traders sense value in familiar names. The hard part is turning a sharp rebound into a durable recovery.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.















