Secondary Market

The secondary market in NFTs is the ecosystem of peer-to-peer trading platforms, price discovery mechanisms, and holder-to-holder transactions where previously minted NFTs change hands after their initial creation — operating through specialized NFT marketplaces (OpenSea, Blur on Ethereum; Magic Eden on Solana; Tensor on Solana) where token holders list their NFTs at desired prices, buyers submit offers or purchase at listed prices, and the marketplace smart contract atomically transfers the token from seller to buyer while distributing proceeds among the seller, creator (royalty), and marketplace (platform fee), with total secondary trading volume, floor price trends, and sales velocity serving as the primary real-time indicators of a collection’s health, demand, and cultural relevance. The secondary market is where the overwhelming majority of NFT economic activity occurs — primary mints are one-time events, while secondary trading continues indefinitely for any collection with ongoing holder interest.


Primary vs. Secondary Market

Dimension Primary Market Secondary Market
Who sells Creator/project team Current token holders
Smart contract Mint function Marketplace (OpenSea, Blur)
Price Fixed mint price Market-determined
Creator revenue 100% of mint price Royalty % only (2.5–10%)
Buyer Anyone (allowlist or public) Anyone with sufficient ETH/SOL
When Launch event Ongoing, indefinitely
Gas cost Mint gas Transfer + marketplace gas

Major Secondary Marketplaces

Ethereum

Marketplace Model Fee Royalties
OpenSea Order-book 2.5% Optional (2022+)
Blur Order-book + bid pools 0.5% Optional (optional 0.5%)
Reservoir Aggregator Varies Passes through
LooksRare Order-book 2% Optional

Solana

Marketplace Model Fee Notes
Magic Eden Order-book 2% Dominant Solana marketplace
Tensor Order-book + AMM 1% DeFi-style liquidity mechanisms

Other Chains

  • SuperRare: Curated 1/1 art; higher royalties
  • Zora: Open edition-focused; minimal fees

Key Secondary Market Metrics

Floor Price

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Collection: 10,000 tokens

Cheapest listing: 0.15 ETH

→ Floor price = 0.15 ETH

Floor = entry cost for new buyers

Floor × supply = “market cap” (informal valuation metric)

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Volume

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Daily volume: $1M = highly active

Weekly volume: $50K = low liquidity

Volume spike: usually follows reveal, major announcement, or viral moment

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Sales Count

  • High sales count + low volume: many cheap sales (active community, affordable collection)
  • Low sales count + high volume: few whale transactions (illiquid, high-value collection)

Unique Buyers/Sellers


How Secondary Market Transactions Work

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  1. Holder lists NFT on OpenSea:
    Signs an off-chain order (EIP-712 signature)
    Order stored in OpenSea’s database (not on-chain yet)
    No gas cost to list
  1. Buyer purchases:
    Calls OpenSea’s Seaport contract
    Contract atomically:

a. Transfers ETH from buyer → [seller, creator, marketplace]

b. Transfers NFT from seller → buyer

  • One atomic transaction = cannot be partially completed
  1. Fee distribution (example: 1 ETH sale, 5% royalty):
    Seller receives: 0.925 ETH
    Creator receives: 0.05 ETH (royalty)
    OpenSea receives: 0.025 ETH (2.5% fee)

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Floor vs. Rarity Premium

Secondary market pricing has two layers:

  • Floor tokens: Common traits; priced at or near floor price
  • Rare tokens: Uncommon or unique traits; priced at rarity premium (2–100× floor)

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Collection floor: 0.1 ETH

Top-10 rarity token: 3 ETH (30× floor)

1/1 grail token: 15 ETH (150× floor)

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Rarity premium is determined by trait desirability, not just statistical rarity — culturally desirable traits trade higher than mathematically rare ones that aren’t visually appealing.


Secondary Market Royalty Wars

The biggest secondary market controversy was the 2022–2023 creator royalty debate:

  • Traditional: OpenSea enforces 5–10% creator royalties on all sales
  • Blur (2022): Launched with 0% creator royalties as default → massive volume migration from OpenSea
  • Result: creators lost royalty income; marketplace competition drove royalties toward zero for many collections
  • Industry response: Some projects use on-chain operator filters to block non-royalty-paying marketplaces

History

  • 2017: Cryptopunks secondary market emerges on the open web; early peer-to-peer trading
  • 2018: OpenSea launches as first major NFT marketplace; creates standardized secondary market
  • 2021: NFT secondary market volume explodes: OpenSea reaches $3.4B monthly volume (Aug 2021)
  • 2022 Jan: OpenSea briefly peaks at $5B monthly volume
  • 2022 Oct: Blur launches with token incentives + 0% royalties; begins OpenSea share erosion
  • 2023: Blur overtakes OpenSea in raw Ethereum NFT volume
  • 2024–2025: Secondary volumes normalized post-bear; Blur + OpenSea compete; Tensor dominant on Solana

See Also