Bitcoin’s Lightning Network capacity has declined from over 5,400 BTC in late 2023 to around 4,200 BTC by August 2025, a roughly 20% drop, per mempool.space data. While the raw figures imply a contraction, analysts and developers suggest the shift reflects structural evolution in routing and protocol design rather than a retreat in adoption.
The network’s capacity metric refers to the total amount of BTC locked in publicly advertised payment channels, which form the graph used to route peer-to-peer transactions.
The decline in public capacity accompanies a longer-term drop in public node and channel counts, which have been in steady decline since 2022, according to data from mempool.space.
Developers attribute part of this trend to the consolidation of routing through better-managed hub nodes and the adoption of protocol enhancements like channel splicing. These changes allow wallets to resize channels without on-chain transactions, reducing the need for new channels and enabling more efficient use of liquidity.
This opens the door to dollar-denominated payments and stablecoin-backed remittances on the network, which would not require BTC to be locked in channels, effectively decoupling usage from Bitcoin-denominated capacity metrics. Lightning Labs CEO Elizabeth Stark said the integration combines the security of Bitcoin with the speed and scalability of Lightning.
At a structural level, developers are also addressing issues that affect payment reliability and channel health. Research on jamming attacks and replacement cycling vulnerabilities continues through the Bitcoin Optech working groups, while features like BOLT12 Offers and liquidity automation tooling are making Lightning more robust for commercial usage.
The design enables automated agents to pay per inference call or API response without requiring fiat accounts or static keys, offering a new machine-to-machine payment stream that does not rely on capacity growth to scale.
These protocol and use-case shifts provide context for why public capacity alone may no longer be a complete indicator of the network’s adoption trajectory.
Developers argue that Lightning’s current evolution is less about growing visible liquidity and more about increasing the utility of each satoshi already in motion.
While the public capacity trendline may be descending, the underlying metrics on usage, integration, and technical progress tell a different story.