Hive stats 2025: The Floor is In, But The Walls Are Higher

The data for 2025 is in. On the surface, it looks like "stabilization"—the massive drops from 2023 have slowed down. But when you look closer at who is left and where the money is going, a different picture emerges.

We aren't dying, but we might be becoming a closed fortress.

📝 YEARLY GROWTH & ENGAGEMENT REPORT

yearPostsDaily Avg PostsPostersInteractionsUsersCurators (Silent)New Accts
20211,410,7243,86442,0375,724,12750,7028,665910,098
20221,351,9253,70338,3568,229,73146,0647,70897,468
20231,074,8122,94427,1388,944,54832,9565,81847,666
2024916,6732,51131,1698,149,74138,9197,75063,974
2025842,5482,30825,5757,256,48540,05314,47857,556

"The numbers for 2025 tell a story of stabilization. After the brutal drops of 2023 (-20%) and 2024 (-15%), the decline in posting volume has slowed significantly to just -8%. But the most interesting anomaly is the user count: despite fewer posts, we actually saw a 2.9% increase in active users.

This suggests we have reached a 'hard floor.' The casual tourists and reward-farmers who fled during the bear market are gone. What remains is a smaller, but far more stubborn ecosystem. The quantity is lower, but the network itself isn't shrinking anymore—it’s hardening."

📝 🧲 RETENTION: YEAR-OVER-YEAR LOYALTY

yearTotal PostersRetained from Prev YearRetention Rate
202238,35615,72037.40%
202327,13813,17934.36%
202431,16910,25237.78%
202525,57510,41333.41%

"Retention has remained remarkably consistent over the last three years. The data shows a '1-in-3 Rule': roughly 33-37% of people who posted last year are still posting this year.

In the volatile world of crypto, where apps rise and fall in months, this is our strongest metric. It means that once someone survives their first year on Hive, they tend to stick around. The churn is happening almost entirely at the onboarding phase (new accounts), not among the established core."

📝 📅 DAILY EXTREMES (BEST & WORST DAYS)

yearrBest DateMax PostsWorst DateMin Posts
20212021-04-055,9472021-01-012,488
20222022-01-176,7022022-12-252,364
20232023-02-243,8722023-12-252,375
20242024-03-123,0702024-11-101,923
20252025-12-043,2872025-12-241,393

"The daily activity extremes for 2025 confirm that Hive is still very much a human network, subject to real-world calendars.

  • The Worst Day: December 24th (1,393 posts). As expected, people log off for the holidays.

  • The Best Day: December 4th (3,287 posts).

This 50% drop-off during holidays is actually a healthy sign—it proves our traffic isn't dominated by automated scripts that run 24/7 regardless of the season. Real people take breaks."

📝 👥 USER HABITS: POST FREQUENCY (COUNT & %)

yr1 Post2-5 Posts6-10 Posts11-25 Posts26-50 Posts51-100 Posts100+ Posts
202110,842 (25.8%)12,277 (29.2%)4,810 (11.4%)5,081 (12.1%)2,962 (7.0%)2,434 (5.8%)3,631 (8.6%)
202210,493 (27.4%)10,312 (26.9%)4,038 (10.5%)4,653 (12.1%)2,981 (7.8%)2,288 (6.0%)3,591 (9.4%)
20236,522 (24.0%)7,378 (27.2%)2,910 (10.7%)3,676 (13.5%)2,017 (7.4%)1,753 (6.5%)2,882 (10.6%)
202410,685 (34.3%)9,451 (30.3%)2,529 (8.1%)2,781 (8.9%)1,733 (5.6%)1,508 (4.8%)2,482 (8.0%)
20257,710 (30.1%)6,623 (25.9%)2,546 (10.0%)3,308 (12.9%)1,627 (6.4%)1,388 (5.4%)2,373 (9.3%)

We see two diverging trends here.

  • Less Spam: The percentage of 'One-Hit Wonders' (users who post once and leave) dropped from 34% in 2024 to 30% in 2025.

  • Higher Intensity: The dedicated users are working harder. The share of users posting 100+ times a year rose to 9.3%.

Basically, the casual middle ground is thinning out. You are either here to post almost daily, or you aren't posting at all. This polarization of activity is what drives the 'exclusive' feel of the current chain. Let's consider the hard core user, the ones who do post at least once a week, so an average, 52 posts or more. That group only cover 14.7% of the user base. This is way too low.
We are speaking here about a little bit over 4000 users. Way too low.
And still there are post which are under rewarded, meaning that the biggest part of those 4K users don't look outside their upvote circle. Which is slowly choking Hive.

📝 💰 ECONOMICS: PAYOUTS & ZERO VALUE POSTS

yearavg_payoutmedian_payoutZero_Payout_PostsZero Payout %
2021$7.35$1.12255,58118.12%
2022$7.03$1.37233,51217.27%
2023$5.07$1.18191,24817.79%
2024$4.89$1.27166,33018.14%
2025$4.35$1.27168,87920.04%

This is the most concerning dataset in the report. In 2025, 20.04% of all posts received $0.00 payout. That is up from 18% in 2024 and 17% in 2023.

While the average payout dropped to $4.35 (driven by HIVE price action), the increase in zero-payout posts suggests the reward pool is becoming a closed fortress. New users or casual bloggers are finding it harder to get that first upvote. If 1 in 5 posts earns nothing, we risk becoming an ecosystem where only the established 'whales' and their friends can afford to play. This isn't just 'quality control'—it's a barrier to entry. I could run metrics which do prove that the bug curating accounts are feeding this behavour. But that is for another post.
So, 50% of the posts do earn more than 1.27 and 50% earn less.

📉 TREND ANALYSIS: 2024 vs 2025

METRICPREVCURRCHANGE
🟢 Users38,91940,053+2.91%
🔴 Posters31,16925,575-17.95%
🔴 Posts916,673842,548-8.09%
🔴 New Accts63,97457,556-10.03%
🟢 Curators7,75014,478+86.81%
🔴 Avg Payout54-10.93%

As we all know, you can almost use all stats to prove everything. I do see some things which are less worse then expected, but I also see some things which more or less prove that we are choking Hive. It starts to look more and more like an exclusive club of people taking about Hive, photography and starting more and more to look like a cooking book. If you don't use any of these 3 tags, you are almost doomed. One thing which can help you is if you do translate your post into multiple languages, no idea why this is helps, but it does pull the attention of curators.
And yes, if you don't earn more than 1.27, just be assured that there are automated posts explaining the translation of a Spanish word in English, which would kill your motivation. But hey that is the route the community want to give a share of the reward pool to.

Feel free to interprete the stats how you want. And feel free to let me know what your opinion is.

Cheers,
Peter

Posted Using INLEO

Sort:  

One thing which can help you is if you do translate your post into multiple languages, no idea why this is helps, but it does pull the attention of curators.

May be because of the increase in word count ? Surprising to see 14,478 Curators (Silent) for 25,575 Posters - literally more than half. Don't know whey so many posts still do not get rewards - isn't that interesting ?

Yes and no. I do think there are a lot of spam posts within that number. Some posts where the values have been reset to 0 due to downvotes. And so on.
I am not surprised at that number. There are some who do post 10 posts per day.

People not getting noticed is certainly a problem. Part of it is that it's time-consuming for curators to manually curate, so their search is constrained by time. Perhaps helping newer users realize they need to focus on a handful of communities and get connected is a more realistic approach than expecting curators to branch out more. That's not to say they shouldn't, but it's easier to help newer users adapt early.

!BBH
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User retention is indeed hard. It all starts with commenting on other posts. Try to get some attention.
But if you do see that post about a dictionary does earn more than 2$, there are also other problems.

I don’t think that I did earn on my first 20 posts or so. I did earn back in the days more with comments than writing posts. Sometimes this still is the case.

Interesting stats even if they are not all positive. We have to be realistic about where we stand and that we could do better. Personally I do okay, but I want everyone to have a chance on Hive as long as they are not abusing it. There are plenty of scammy accounts being created, but most get dealt with. I know there are various efforts to help new users. I think people need to find their communities where they can get some support.

I've been tracking the UK users and we have seen a drop in active users there. The price will be a factor in that, but I hope it can improve as I know a lot of people who are just busy elsewhere. I think we need to tempt them away from the corporate platforms.

!BEER

Indeed, the price will also had an impact but that doesn't explain all numbers. We do have a hard core base and we are falling back to that. The problem is that the hard core base mostly writes about Hive, food and photography and only curate posts about those. This is a real danger. The diverse the posts are, the more interesting it is for other users to join.
But the new users do need to understand that hard work and interaction is needed to build a reputation. The first weeks/months on Hive can be pretty dark and lonesome.

The numbers don't like. I think it paints a pretty accurate picture of what those of us that have been around here for a while have seen.

While not as bad as I did think, it is hard to see those hard figures.


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Hive missed the AI revolution

Don’t know that for sure. How would you integrate AI into Hive.
I tried to discover under rewarded posts for instance. While it drove me to some posts, most were under par.

But I could missing the added value of AI on hive. Feel free to share your opinions.

Post should be upvote for quality content, wether or not written by AI.

Depends. I would aks an ai to write me a post about x and they would just cppy paste it. Than no.
If they say ai I want to write a post about x. I do have this opinion, this should be added and that. Than I do agree.

The biggest problem is that all the bug curation accounts start to look like an inner circle. Regardless of quality. Also only the same topics. They don’t visit my posts, so also a little frustration for my side.

It is nice to see in data what a lot of people have been saying for 1-2 years ... we have only 4,000 users, and very little chance of getting more because there are enough people here who like it small and profitable for them and do not care about running people off. More for them. The complete lack of attention to proper marketing in the last bull cycle makes sense in that context, too.

Well Hive is very known within Hive. I don’t think that lots of people outside hive do know Hive 😔

Right ... and this is a lack of concerted effort while we pay for everything else through the DHF -- by the millions of dollars -- but getting the word out.

thank you for these great stats!