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Recently, I noticed an interesting trend: some digital art objects are selling for more than entire houses. The NFT market has truly created a new reality for collectors and artists.
Let's take a look at the most expensive NFTs ever sold. The Merge by Pak tops the list — $91.8 million. But an interesting detail: this isn't a single object, but 312,686 parts purchased by over 28,000 collectors. An innovative approach to selling, honestly.
Next is Beeple with his Everydays: The First 5000 Days — $69 million at Christie's auction in 2021. The guy created one piece of art every day for 5000 days straight. Now that’s perseverance. The buyer, MetaKovan, paid 42,329 ETH — at the time, that was a significant sum.
The Clock by Pak and Assange — $52.7 million. An NFT with a timer counting down the days of Julian Assange’s imprisonment. Bought by a DAO consisting of over 100,000 supporters. Now that’s political art.
Human One by Beeple — $29 million. This isn’t just a picture, but a physical kinetic sculpture with a 16K display that constantly changes. Beeple can remotely update it. A living piece of art.
CryptoPunks occupy a huge part of the ranking. #5822 (инопланетный панк) — 23 миллиона. #7523 (Alien Punk in a medical mask) — $11.75 million. A series of 10,000 avatars launched in 2017, which became an industry icon. Many of these most expensive NFTs have been sold multiple times with increasing prices.
I also noticed that TPunk #3442 (the so-called Joker) Justin Sun bought for $10.5 million. This is a derivative of CryptoPunks on the Tron blockchain.
Ringers #109 by Dmitry Chernyak — $6.93 million. Generative art on Art Blocks. Even the cheapest Ringer now costs around $88,000.
What amazes me? The NFT market is incredibly volatile. CryptoPunk #4156 (monkey with a bandana) was sold for $1.25 million just 10 months ago, then for $10.26 million. An 8x increase in a year.
In terms of sales volume, the leaders are Axie Infinity ($4.27 billion) and Bored Ape Yacht Club ($3.16 billion). Collections, not individual items.
Interestingly, many of these most expensive NFTs have been purchased by people already well-known in the crypto community. MetaKovan, Justin Sun, Robert Leshner — they’re not just collectors, they’re players. They understand what they’re buying.
As for the current state: as of January 2026, the market capitalization of NFTs is estimated at around $2.6 billion. Yes, it’s not 2021-2022, when everyone was talking about NFTs. But the market has stabilized. 95% of NFTs are practically worthless, but those 5% that have value hold huge sums.
In fact, each of these most expensive NFTs tells a story. The Merge — about democratizing art. Everydays — about perseverance. Clock — about political activism. Human One — about a future where digital and physical merge.
The market is changing, but one thing is clear: NFTs are no longer just hype. They are a new asset class with their own logic and collectors. And the most expensive NFTs will continue to set new records as technology and culture evolve.