InterLink has surpassed 7 million verified human users. The network added its latest million users in just over a month, accelerating from the 6 million milestone rather than slowing down thereafter.
π INTERLINK EXCEEDS 7 MILLION REAL USERS
π From 6 million+ to 7 million+ verified people in just over one month β this isn’t just momentum, it’s acceleration.
Seven million is not just a number. It represents seven million verified identities. Seven million real individuals active⦠pic.twitter.com/drp9Qcf0AQ
β InterLink Labs π€ + π (@inter_link) March 21, 2026
The announcement confirms that growth is not slowing down and that the network is now preparing the next phase of activity, including new events, recognition mechanisms for verified users and additional avenues for participation and value creation within the ecosystem.
What seven million verified users actually mean
The number that matters here isn’t just the grand total. It’s the verification layer underneath. InterLink’s user count represents verified human identities, no wallets, no accounts that could be bots, no addresses that have been converted into farm rewards.
Seven million real individuals who have gone through an identity verification process and are actively participating in the network.
That distinction is really difficult to realize on a large scale. Most crypto projects report wallet addresses or app downloads. InterLink reports verified people, which is a different and significantly more difficult metric to inflate. Adding a million verified users in just over a month means the verification process isn’t scaring people off.
Most ID checks create enough friction to kill momentum. InterLink’s onboarding apparently doesn’t do that.
What drives adoption
It takes time to grow from a certain base level to 6 million. Adding the next million in just over a month is a different kind of momentum. Networks tend to slow down as they grow because the easiest-to-reach users are reached first, and subsequent growth requires more effort per user. InterLink’s trajectory runs in the opposite direction, with the latest million arriving faster than previous cohorts.
That kind of acceleration in a verified identity network has even more implications. Each new verified user makes the network more valuable to the users already on it. Trust-based networks, where participants know they are communicating with real people rather than bots or anonymous wallets, become more useful as the participant pool grows.
Seven million verified people are large enough to support meaningful economic activities, collaborative events, and social coordination that would not work on a smaller scale.
What comes next for the InterLink network
InterLink uses the 7 million milestone as a launching pad rather than a finish line. The announcement outlines three specific directions for the next phase.
A new wave of events will roll out to the user base. Special mechanisms are being prepared to specifically recognize and increase the value of verified users. And new ways will be introduced for users to participate, contribute and unlock value within the ecosystem.
The language surrounding these announcements is intentionally broad, but the direction is clear. The network is moving from a growth phase focused on user acquisition to an activation phase focused on what verified users can actually do and earn within the system. Identity verification was the basis. The question now is what will be built on top of it.
Framing verified identity as a prerequisite for real trust and value is central to InterLink’s thesis. A network full of real people works differently than a network full of anonymous wallets and bots. Rewards actually mean something when they land with a human on the other side.
Contributions carry more weight if the contributor is a verified identity. Events and coordination mechanisms work differently when participants can trust who they interact with.
Why verified identity networks are worth checking out
The broader context for InterLink’s growth is a crypto ecosystem that continues to struggle with Sybil attacks, bot farming, and the proliferation of anonymous wallets that distort participation metrics and reward distribution. Projects that solve identity verification at scale address a fundamental problem that affects almost every other layer of Web3 participation.
By reaching 7 million verified users while still seeing such massive adoption, InterLink is among a small group of projects that have actually demonstrated this at meaningful scale. The next phase, activating these identities through events, recognition mechanisms and new participation pathways, will determine whether the network converts its user base into sustainable economic activity.
Conclusion
Seven million verified people in a single network is a number not comparable in crypto. The acceleration from 6 million to 7 million in one month is more important than the total itself. InterLink is now moving from building its user base to activating it, and the mechanisms being prepared for verified users will determine whether this milestone becomes a foundation or just a headline.
