Cardano now has its own dedicated section on Token Terminal, the analytics platform that institutional investors and developers use to compare blockchain networks the way stock screeners compare equities. The partnership, announced June 1, brings standardized onchain metrics, custom dashboards, and API access to the Cardano ecosystem.
What the partnership actually delivers
Token Terminal has launched dedicated Cardano dashboards that track the kind of metrics institutional players care about: revenue, active users, validator counts, and other standardized financial data points. Cardano is now listed in Token Terminal’s L1 blockchain market sector dashboard alongside networks like Ethereum and Solana.
The integration also includes API access, which means hedge funds, research desks, and analytics firms can programmatically pull Cardano data into their own models.
Over ten project dashboards for the Cardano ecosystem are already live on the platform. That’s not just the base layer itself but individual protocols and applications building on top of it.
One of the more practical benefits is a reduction in data maintenance burden for Cardano. Instead of the network’s teams having to independently compile, format, and distribute metrics to various platforms, Token Terminal handles the standardization and syndication. Data from the integration is already flowing to major platforms including Binance, CoinGecko, and Bloomberg Terminal.
Community-funded groundwork made this possible
This didn’t come out of nowhere. The formal partnership sits on top of months of community-driven work funded through Cardano Catalyst, the network’s decentralized treasury system that lets $ADA holders vote on project proposals.
Catalyst proposals specifically targeting Token Terminal integration were approved and executed, getting Cardano’s data onto the platform within four months. That’s a notably quick turnaround for a project that required building data pipelines, standardizing metrics, and launching multiple dashboards.
The Cardano Foundation has pointed to this integration as evidence of the ecosystem’s expanding transparency and reach. The sequence matters for understanding how Cardano operates: a community proposal identified the gap, token holders voted to fund it, developers executed the integration, and then the formal partnership announcement followed.
Why data visibility matters for $ADA
According to the data now available through Token Terminal, $ADA recently averaged approximately 13,200 daily active users. That’s a modest figure compared to the largest networks, but having it reported in a standardized format alongside competitors is arguably more important than the number itself.
Cardano has historically been at a disadvantage in this regard. Its UTXO-based architecture, while technically robust, doesn’t map neatly onto the account-based models that most analytics platforms were built to track. That made Cardano harder to compare apples-to-apples with Ethereum or Solana, which meant it often got left out of institutional screening processes entirely.
The data pipeline to Bloomberg Terminal is particularly significant. Token Terminal’s standardized approach to blockchain financial metrics — treating chains somewhat like businesses with revenue, expenses, and earnings — gives it outsized influence on how institutional capital views different networks, and Cardano is now listed alongside Ethereum and Solana in that framework.
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