Analysis

Tron Users Burned $700 Million in Avoidable USDT Fees in 2025. Here Is the On-Chain Proof.

Every time someone sends USDT on Tron without Energy, the network burns their TRX. Not a little. Not a rounding error. Enough that in 2025, Tron's total network revenue hit $3.51 billion, making it one of the highest-earning blockchains on earth. The question nobody has answered clearly is: how much of that revenue was avoidable? How much TRX was destroyed by ordinary users who simply did not know they could pay less? We spent weeks pulling data from TronScan, Token Terminal, CryptoQuant, and Blockworks to build the answer. Every number in this article links to its source. Every calculation shows its working. If you think we got something wrong, check it yourself. That is the point.

Data Point 1: Tron Generated $3.51 Billion in Network Revenue in 2025

This is not an estimate. Token Terminal, the protocol analytics platform, recorded Tron's 2025 total revenue at $3.51 billion. TronWeekly reported this figure from the quarterly earnings data in early 2026. For context, Tron's 2024 revenue was $2.12 billion (crypto.news via Lookonchain), meaning revenue grew 65% year over year despite a 52% fee cut in August.

That $3.51 billion makes Tron one of the top five revenue-generating blockchains alongside Ethereum, Solana, Jito, and Flashbots. The 1kx 2025 On-Chain Revenue Report confirmed these top five captured approximately 80% of all blockchain fees in the first half of 2025.

Where does all that money come from? That brings us to the second data point.

Data Point 2: One Smart Contract Consumes 92% of All Energy on Tron

Visit TronScan's resource consumption ranking. The page shows every smart contract on the network ranked by Energy consumption. At the top, consuming 92% of all Energy on the entire Tron blockchain, is a single contract:

TR7NHqjeKQxGTCi8q8ZY4pL8otSzgjLj6t
USDT (TetherToken)
92% of all network Energy · 89.75% of all contract calls

The second-largest contract consumes 1%. Tron is, for all practical purposes, a USDT transfer machine. This is not an opinion. It is on-chain data that anyone can verify in 30 seconds.

Blockworks confirmed this from the revenue side in their September 2025 analysis: approximately 90% of Tron's revenue comes from USDT transfers. The TronScan data and the Blockworks figure align because they are measuring the same reality from different angles.

Data Point 3: Half of All USDT Energy Is Paid by Burning TRX

This is where it gets interesting. TronScan's resource consumption API does not just show how much Energy the USDT contract consumes. It breaks down where that Energy comes from.

For the USDT contract, the API returns three fields:

  • energy (from staked or delegated sources): 43.4 billion units
  • trx (from burning TRX): 43.6 billion units
  • contract_supplied (from the contract deployer): 67.5 million units (negligible)
49.9%
Covered by staked
or delegated Energy
50.1%
Paid by burning TRX
(users without Energy)

A near-perfect 50/50 split. Half of all USDT transfers on Tron are made by users who have Energy (exchanges, power users, people who stake or rent). The other half are made by users who burn TRX at full cost because they either do not know Energy exists or have not set it up.

That second half is the waste.

The Calculation

Now we can connect the data points.

TronScan's burn revenue chart shows the daily dollar value of TRX destroyed by users paying fees through burning. The Protocol Revenue API breaks this down further: burn income accounts for approximately 20% of total network revenue, with 93.8% of all burns being Energy burns (not bandwidth).

MetricValueSource
Total Tron revenue 2025$3.51BToken Terminal / TronWeekly
USDT share of network Energy92%TronScan resource consumption
USDT share of revenue~90%Blockworks
Burn income share of total revenue~20%TronScan Protocol Revenue API
Energy burns as share of all burns93.8%TronScan Protocol Revenue API
Estimated annual burn revenue~$700M$3.51B × 20%
USDT share of burns (92%)~$644M$700M × 92%

Between $644 million and $700 million in TRX was burned in 2025 by users sending USDT without Energy. Users who had Energy paid less for the same transfers. The gap between those two groups is the avoidable cost.

A note on methodology

The 20% burn share comes from TronScan's Protocol Revenue API. This percentage fluctuates daily and shifted after Proposal #104's fee cut in August 2025. The $700M figure is an annual estimate based on the available data, not a precise accounting. The true figure could be 15-25% higher or lower depending on the exact daily burn ratios across the year. We chose to present the midpoint rather than cherry-pick the most dramatic number. If you want the exact daily breakdown, TronScan's burn revenue chart provides it.

What This Means Per Transfer

CryptoQuant's 2025 annual report recorded 825 million USDT transfers on Tron during the year, with monthly transactions reaching an all-time high of 323 million in December. The CoinDesk Q3 2025 report noted the average fee dropped to $0.53 after the fee cut.

But that average masks a critical divide. Users with Energy paid close to zero. Users without Energy paid the full burn rate. Post-Proposal #104, that means:

ScenarioEnergy CostTRX BurnedUSD Cost (at $0.30 TRX)
Send to wallet with USDT (no Energy)64,285 units6.4 TRX$1.92
Send to wallet with USDT (with Energy)64,285 units0 TRX$0 (Energy covers it)
Send to empty wallet (no Energy)130,285 units13.4 TRX$4.02
Send to empty wallet (with Energy)130,285 units0 TRX$0 (Energy covers it)

The user with Energy pays the rental cost (roughly 3-4 TRX through a service like TronNRG). The user without Energy pays the full burn. Same network, same transfer, same speed. One user pays half what the other pays, purely because of a resource management step that takes 10 seconds.

Proposal #104 Changed the Maths, Not the Problem

On August 29, 2025, Tron's Super Representatives voted to cut the energy unit price from 210 sun to 100 sun. This was the largest fee reduction in Tron's history, roughly a 52% cut.

Before Proposal #104, a standard USDT transfer burned 13.4 TRX. After it, the same transfer burns 6.4 TRX. Before, sending to an empty wallet burned 27.25 TRX. After, it burns 13.4 TRX. The fee cut was real and significant.

But it did not solve the underlying problem. Users without Energy still burn TRX at the reduced rate. The waste is smaller per transfer, but the volume of transfers keeps growing. December 2025 hit 323 million monthly transactions. More transfers at lower per-unit waste can still produce enormous aggregate waste.

Pre-fee-cut, Tron was earning roughly $47.7 million per month in fees (DeFiLlama via CryptoSlate). Post-cut, daily fees dropped from $1.9 million to $1.2 million (CoinDesk Q3 report). Yet Q4 revenue was still $655.57 million because volume surged to compensate.

What Energy Delegation Actually Saves

The 50/50 split in the TronScan data tells us that half of all USDT senders already use Energy. These are exchanges, OTC desks, payment processors, and technically savvy individuals who have figured out the system.

The other half are the people this article is for. If you send USDT on Tron and watch your TRX balance drop by 6-13 TRX each time, you are in the burning half. You are part of the $700 million.

Renting Energy before each transfer costs roughly 3-4 TRX through a delegation service. That turns a 6.4 TRX burn into a 3-4 TRX rental. A 40-50% saving per transfer. Over 100 transfers per year, that compounds into real money.

But the larger point is not about any single service. It is about the structural inefficiency. $700 million per year is being destroyed by users who could pay less for the same result. The data is on-chain. The sources are linked. The fix exists. The only missing piece is awareness.

▸ Verify everything yourself

TronScan Resource Consumption — see USDT's 92% Energy dominance live.

TronScan Burn Revenue Chart — daily TRX burn revenue in USD.

Token Terminal — Tron financial statement and revenue data.

DefiLlama — independent fee and revenue tracking.

▸ Related data

Tron processes more USDT than every other blockchain combined — context for why these numbers are so large.

Tron Energy vs Burning TRX — the mechanics explained.

The real cost of USDT fees per year — personal savings calculator.

STOP BEING PART OF THE $700 MILLION

Rent Energy from TronNRG before every USDT send. 4 TRX. 3 seconds. 50% less waste.

RENT ENERGY NOW →

FAQ

Where does the $700 million figure come from?
Tron generated $3.51B in total network revenue in 2025 (Token Terminal, reported by TronWeekly). TronScan's Protocol Revenue API shows burn income (TRX destroyed by users without Energy) accounts for approximately 20% of total revenue. 20% of $3.51B is approximately $700M. TronScan's resource consumption data confirms 92% of network Energy is consumed by the USDT contract, meaning the vast majority of this burn revenue comes from USDT transfers.
Can I verify these numbers myself?
Yes. Visit tronscan.org and navigate to Data > Charts > Revenue > Burn Revenue for the burn chart. Visit Data > Rankings > Resource Consumption for the USDT energy dominance. Token Terminal and DefiLlama both track Tron's total revenue independently. Every data source in this article is linked and publicly accessible.
What changed with Proposal #104?
On August 29, 2025, Tron's Super Representatives voted to cut the energy unit price from 210 sun to 100 sun, roughly a 52% reduction. This halved per-transaction fees. Before the cut, a standard USDT transfer burned ~13.4 TRX. After the cut, it burns ~6.4 TRX (to a non-empty wallet). The cut reduced waste but did not eliminate it because users without Energy still burn TRX at the new rate.
How does Energy delegation reduce fees?
When you rent Energy before a USDT transfer, the network uses the delegated Energy instead of burning your TRX. A transfer that would burn 6.4 TRX without Energy costs approximately 3-4 TRX with rented Energy. The saving is 40-50% per transfer, compounding across every send.
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