September 20 is International NFT Day, a date many still associate with cartoon apes, pixelated art, and crypto speculation. But this year’s observance arrives amid a measurable shift in blockchain activity that suggests NFTs are becoming something much bigger, and that the United States may need to decide quickly how it wants to engage with the digital economy they are helping shape.
In July 2025, NFT activity on the Ethereum blockchain surpassed decentralized finance (DeFi) in daily active wallets for the first time. NFTs logged 3.85 million daily active wallets compared to DeFi’s 3.84 million, according to data compiled by Coin World. While the edge is small, it is significant: more blockchain users are interacting with tokenized assets and digital collectibles than with protocols designed for lending, borrowing, and other decentralized financial services.
Ethereum’s overall activity has also surged. Transaction volume jumped 70% from June to July, reaching $238 billion, its highest since 2021, and the network recorded a record 1.74 million daily transactions. NFT marketplaces are capturing much of that traffic. Blur, for example, handled 80% of daily NFT trading volume in July. High-profile collections such as Cool Cats saw the kind of activity that turns heads even in a volatile market: its floor price rose 48% in a single day, with $112 million in total monthly trading volume.
The July numbers suggest NFTs are moving past their reputation as purely speculative assets. Collections and platforms are increasingly tied to real-world applications: in-game economies, tokenized real estate, digital identity, music rights, and fractionalized ownership of physical collectibles.
This shift is happening alongside continued growth in DeFi, which still holds $270 billion in total value locked, largely driven by tokenized stocks and advanced decentralized applications. The difference is in the kind of engagement. DeFi’s utility remains primarily financial, while NFTs are becoming an access point for cultural, commercial, and technological interactions.
Ethereum’s expanding role in both areas has sparked broader debates. In early August, its market capitalization surpassed that of Netflix, fueling speculation about whether blockchain-based platforms could challenge legacy financial infrastructure providers such as Mastercard. Lower transaction costs and scalability improvements have made Ethereum more appealing to both retail users and institutions, creating a foundation for long-term adoption.
Even with record-breaking activity, the NFT market faces the same challenges that have defined crypto since its inception. Volatility can turn surges into slides overnight. Regulatory shifts, whether in the U.S., the European Union, or Asia, can rapidly change how platforms operate. And macroeconomic conditions, such as interest rate changes, influence both investor appetite and transaction volumes.
Still, the sustained growth of NFTs through 2025, including their overtaking of DeFi in user activity, suggests a more structural shift in blockchain adoption. Rather than simply riding speculative hype cycles, NFTs appear to be embedding themselves in a wider range of use cases and financial interactions.
As NFT Day arrives, the conversation is not just about market performance. It is also about governance. Other countries are already exploring national strategies for digital assets, from property rights frameworks to taxation and cross-border trade rules. The U.S., however, still lacks a unified approach, with debates often centering on enforcement actions rather than forward-looking infrastructure.
The risk of inaction is that standards for ownership, transfer, and interoperability could be set elsewhere, potentially in ways that conflict with U.S. values or economic priorities. This is not an abstract concern: the internet’s earliest protocols were shaped in large part by American institutions, helping to solidify the country’s leadership in the tech economy. A similar opportunity exists now with blockchain-based systems, but it will not remain open indefinitely.
That is where voices like Igor Volovich’s come in. As Executive Director of Strategy at America First Technology Infrastructure & Innovation Institute, he sees International NFT Day as a clear reminder that the U.S. cannot afford to be passive.
“International NFT Day is more than a celebration of digital collectibles—it’s a reminder for American policymakers that innovation won’t wait. As the world moves toward decentralized ownership models, the U.S. must lead—not follow—in shaping the legal, economic, and technological frameworks that govern these assets,” Volovich says.
For him, the stakes extend beyond market share or startup success stories.
“This isn’t just about art or speculation; it’s about ensuring that American values like individual property rights and free enterprise are hard-coded into the global digital economy. If we get the rules right now—on NFTs, stablecoins, and beyond—we don’t just protect innovation, we get to shape the infrastructure of global economic freedom and digital sovereignty.”
NFT Day may remain a niche celebration for most Americans, but the dynamics it now represents are anything but niche. In the numbers, in the applications, and in the policy gaps, it is a marker of where the digital economy is headed, and a reminder that leadership is as much about setting the rules as it is about building the technology.































