Last month marked the slowest period for NFT sales in 2025, with market capitalization declining by hundreds of millions of dollars.
The latest figures confirm a continued decline in demand for these assets, which at one point rose to record highs, but has entered a prolonged reversal since the crypto winter of 2022.
NFT sales hit record low
The slump in November was severe. According to CryptoSlam, total non-fungible token (NFT) sales fell to $320 million, nearly halved from $629 million in October. This has brought monthly activity back to around $312 million in September, eroding the small amount of momentum the sector regained earlier in the fall.
The downturn has already spilled over into December, with just $62 million in sales in the first seven days, the weakest weekly performance of the year, according to CoinMarketCap.
NFTs are very bad right now.
Market capitalization decreased from $6.6 billion to $3.5 billion, and trading volume decreased by approximately 65%.
OpenSea’s most hyped token has been postponed to the first quarter of 2026.
Most holders aren’t discounting because of price. It’s depressed because no one is buying it.
This is the healthiest reboot… pic.twitter.com/YTrWoK3UKv
— Salem ☠️ (@web3_Salem) December 3, 2025
The broader valuation picture reflects similar downward pressures. According to data from CoinGecko, the market cap of NFT marketplaces has fallen to $253 million, the lowest level in history, as prices continue to fall for even the most established collections.
This downturn is not an isolated event, but a continuation of a broader multi-year contraction that has reshaped the NFT landscape since its explosive rise in the early 2020s.
From hype cycles to hard resets
NFTs first gained mainstream recognition in 2020, when early art sales and experimental drops attracted a niche community.
By 2021, this market has become a complete cultural phenomenon. Trading volumes on platforms like OpenSea soon skyrocketed to billions of dollars each month.
Collections like CryptoPunks and Bored Ape Yacht Club have turned into status symbols. They have attracted celebrities, global brands, and institutional investors. This momentum continued into early 2022, with NFT activity at an all-time high.
The peak didn’t last. As the overall cryptocurrency market weakened in mid-2022, NFT trading volume rapidly declined.
Liquidity has dried up. Speculative capital has retreated, and the minimum prices for major collections have fallen significantly. Wash trading scandals have damaged trust and oversaturation has added pressure. Thousands of effortless collections competed for limited attention.
By late 2022, monthly trading volumes were down more than 90% from their peak. Over the next two years, the market continued to normalize.
Some utility-driven NFTs, such as gaming assets and loyalty tokens, held steady activity. However, traditional profile photo collections have lost their relevance. Marketplaces competed for users with aggressive incentives, often increasing trading volume without generating any real profits.
By 2025, the sector has moved into a quieter role. It currently operates as a niche segment within the broader digital asset market.
The post November may have destroyed NFTs forever appeared first on BeInCrypto.

