After five consecutive months of capital outflows between October 2025 and March 2026, Bitcoin made a strong reversal in April.
Total inflows this month amounted to $176.8 billion, making this the most bullish period in the asset’s recent history.
Yet a disagreement has formed beneath the surface. While capital inflows have increased, trading activity has weakened, with volume falling to one of the lowest levels in years.
Historically, such disconnections between price and participation have introduced uncertainty about the strength of the trends.
Volume drops to the lowest level in three years
According to data from CryptoQuantBitcoin [BTC] Market volume has fallen to the lowest level in almost three years.
Spot trading activity has contracted sharply, led by Binance, where volumes fell by more than $25 billion in April alone. Despite the decline, the exchange maintains its position as the market’s main liquidity hub.
Other exchanges have recorded similar declines. Gate.io saw volumes drop by $13 billion – roughly half of monthly activity – while OKX posted a decline of an estimated $6 billion.


A persistent drop in volume often reflects reduced market participation, indicating traders are taking positions or staying on the sidelines after recent activity.
Data from MintGlass shows that spot volume over the last 24 hours is $4.73 billion, while the 30-day total has fallen to $141.76 billion, representing a decline of 21.7% over the period.
A similar slowdown occurred in September 2023, which preceded a notable price increase, based on data from CryptoQuant. Whether the current setup follows a similar trajectory remains uncertain.
Buyers remain in control, but momentum is waning
Despite the decline in activity, buyers still have a marginal advantage in the market.
The Spot Taker Cumulative Volume Delta (CVD), a metric used to assess whether buyers or sellers dominate trade flows, shows continued control on the buy side.


Data from CryptoQuant indicates that this is the second recent example of such dominance. The previous signal on April 24 was followed by two days of inflows, with Bitcoin peaking at $79,485 on April 27.
However, current conditions indicate weaker follow-up.
The spot volume bubble chart indicates a cooling phase in the market. Not only has trading activity declined, but the pace of change has also slowed, indicating limited belief among participants.
Weak accumulation caps upwards
Spot accumulation remains subdued, reinforcing the cautious outlook.
Over the past year, total Bitcoin purchases have reached approximately $30.84 billion, underscoring relatively modest long-term accumulation trends.
More recently, flows have tilted somewhat bearish. Over the past thirty days, the market has recorded net outflows of $40.09 million. While this is marginal, it suggests that sustained buying pressure has yet to return.


Short-term data reflect similar conditions. In the past 24 hours, net outflows have reached $70 million. Although periods of intermittent inflows have emerged, these have not materially changed the broader trend.
For Bitcoin’s rally to be meaningful, stronger and more consistent accumulation will be necessary. Until then, the difference between rising prices and declining volume will likely keep the market closely watched.
Final summary
- Bitcoin trading volume has fallen 21% in the last 30 days Binance alone recorded a decline of $25 billion, in addition to sharp contractions on other major exchanges.
- Taker Buy orders continue to dominate the spot market, but overall volume remains subdued, leaving the market vulnerable to renewed selling pressure.
