Real-world assets linking up with non-fungible tokens (NFTs) is one of a few key catalysts that could reignite the waning NFT lending sector, which is suffering from a collapse in volumes and user activity, says blockchain analytics platform DappRadar.
Volumes in the NFT lending market, which allows NFT holders to take out a loan against their token, have dropped 97% from a peak of around $1 billion in January 2024 to $50 million in May, DappRadar analyst Sara Gherghelas said in a May 27 report.
Gherghelas said for NFT lending to âmove beyond survival mode,â it needs ânew catalystsâ to reignite the sector, such as real-world asset NFTs, like tokenized real estate or yield-bearing assets that could unlock more stable, trusted collateral sources.
âSo far, 2025 has not delivered a compelling reason for NFT lending to bounce back,â she said. âWhile the infrastructure is still here and the platforms remain active, activity has slowed across the board.âÂ
Borrower and leading activity have taken a big hit in the NFT lending sector. Source:DappRadar
âFor now, the sector seems to be in a holding pattern, waiting either for market recovery or a new use case to reignite interest.â
Gherghelas added that other catalysts that could rekindle NFT lending were tools that make it easier for NFT holders to borrow against their tokens, and that protocols should create âsmart infrastructureâ such as undercollateralized loans, credit scores and artificial intelligence risk matching.
The report adds that since January last year, borrower activity has declined by 90% and those willing to lend have shrunk by 78%.
The average NFT loan size has also taken a hit from a peak of $22,000 in 2022 to $4,000 in May, a 71% year-over-year drop.
Gherghelas said this shift âshows that either users are borrowing against lower-value assets or simply becoming more conservative with leverage.â
NFT lending overall trading volume and market activity have dropped off from the all-time highs of past years. Source:DappRadar
The average loan duration is also lower; after hitting an average of roughly 40 days in 2023, itâs been down to 31 days and has held steady throughout 2024 and into 2025.
Gherghelas said this could indicate that âloans are being taken more frequently but for shorter periods, perhaps a sign of more tactical liquidity plays.â
NFT ï»żmarket downturn also hurts lending
Part of the slowdown in NFT lending is connected to the overall NFT market decline, which has seen volumes drop 61% in the first quarter to $1.5 billion compared to $4.1 billion a year ago.
âWith collateral value collapsing, the lending activity naturally followed,â Gherghelas said. âThere are a few exceptions that managed to hold or regain traction, but theyâve been outliers, not enough to lift the sector.â
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The protocol landscape has also narrowed, and the number of active NFT lending apps is limited, with only eight protocols holding any meaningful share.
âThe flip-for-liquidity model that worked during bull markets isnât built for a quieter, more risk-averse environment. But that doesnât mean NFT lending is finished; itâs simply shifting focus,â Gherghelas said.
âPlatforms are diversifying, use cases are shifting, and collateral preferences are changing. If the next wave builds on utility, culture, and better design, NFT lending might just find its second wind â one built to last.â
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