Ethereum Leads the Decentralized AI Agent Race @Ethereum is home to 12,371 active AI agents, according to data from @chainspect_app, positioning it as one of the largest players in the decent
Ethereum Leads the Decentralized AI Agent Race
@Ethereum is home to 12,371 active AI agents, according to data from @chainspect_app, positioning it as one of the largest players in the decentralized machine economy across the digital asset sector. These autonomous entities are no longer confined to basic automation. They are now executing complex financial operations across $ETH and its secondary layers with increasing frequency, marking a meaningful shift in how the network is actually used.
What makes this trend notable is the scope of activity. According to @chainspect_app, agents are actively managing GPU-backed assets and agentic treasuries, functions that sit well beyond the remit of simple bots or scheduled scripts. This points to a maturing layer of autonomous economic actors operating on-chain, with real capital at stake.
The Infrastructure Behind the Shift
The growth in active agents on Ethereum is underpinned by a wave of new standards and institutional backing. The Ethereum Foundation launched its dAI Team in 2025, led by Davide Crapis, with a focus on enabling AI agents to pay and coordinate without intermediaries. The team has been driving two core standards: ERC-8004, which establishes on-chain identity and reputation registries for agents, and x402, an open payment protocol that allows machine-to-machine payments using stablecoins.
ERC-8004 in particular has seen rapid uptake. Data from 8004scan tracked growth in ERC-8004 agents from 337 at the start of 2026 to nearly 130,000 across all networks, an increase of over 39,000% in a matter of months. Ethereum mainnet has remained one of the top destinations, with agents choosing it as a settlement and identity layer even as activity spreads across Layer 2 networks like Base, Arbitrum, and Optimism.
The x402 protocol, deployed on Ethereum and its L2s, gives agents a native way to pay for compute, data, and API calls using stablecoins, enabling pay-per-use interactions without human oversight. Complementing this, the ERC-8183 standard introduces programmable escrow for agent-to-agent transactions, allowing one agent to hire another, lock payment in a smart contract, and release it only on verified completion.
The convergence of identity, payment, and dispute resolution infrastructure is what separates today's agent economy from earlier automation experiments. Ethereum's positioning as the trust and settlement backbone for this activity makes the 12,371 active agent count a figure worth watching as the ecosystem continues to scale.
Sources:Chainspect AI Agents DirectoryThe Defiant: BNB Chain Overtakes Ethereum by Number of AI AgentsCrypto Daily: Ethereum Foundation Unveils Ambitious AI Plan for 2026