Been diving into NFT history lately and honestly, the numbers are wild. Pak's The Merge still holds the crown as the most expensive NFT ever recorded—$91.8 million back in December 2021. What's interesting though is how it actually worked. Unlike most high-value pieces owned by a single collector, The Merge was purchased by nearly 29,000 people who each bought units at $575 a piece. It's this unique fractional model that makes it hard to compare directly with other pieces, but the total value speaks for itself.



Before The Merge dominated, Beeple was absolutely crushing it with Everydays: The First 5000 Days. That piece sold for $69 million at Christie's in March 2021, and get this—it started at just $100. The bidding went absolutely crazy because Beeple had already built serious credibility. Dude literally created one digital artwork every single day for 5,000 consecutive days and compiled them into one massive collage. That kind of commitment resonates.

Then there's Clock, which Pak created with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. This one's different because it's not just art—it's activism. A timer that tracks days of imprisonment, updating daily. AssangeDAO dropped $52.7 million on it in February 2022. When you see the most expensive NFT projects, you realize they often carry meaning beyond just aesthetics.

Beeple's also got Human One at nearly $29 million—a kinetic sculpture that's constantly evolving. The piece is 16K resolution, changes based on time of day, and Beeple can remotely update it. Basically a living artwork that never stays the same.

Now, CryptoPunks deserve their own section because they're everywhere on the most expensive NFT lists. CryptoPunk #5822 (one of only nine alien punks) hit $23 million. Then you've got #7523 with its medical mask—$11.75 million at Sotheby's. #4156 is an ape punk that sold for $10.26 million, then resold for $7.57 million earlier. These pieces have been flipping for years, and the rarity attributes (alien theme, specific accessories) directly impact value.

What's wild is how the market has evolved. CryptoPunks launched in 2017 as free NFTs on Ethereum. Now individual pieces are worth tens of millions. Same energy with Bored Ape Yacht Club—the collection as a whole has done $3.16 billion in total sales. Axie Infinity even higher at $4.27 billion.

Other notable ones: TPunk #3442 (Justin Sun's $10.5 million purchase on Tron), XCOPY's Right-click and Save As Guy ($7 million), Ringers #109 ($6.93 million on Art Blocks). Each has its own story.

The thing about tracking the most expensive NFT sales is that the market's still relatively young. We're talking about pieces from 2017-2024 setting records that probably won't last forever. As of January 2026, the total NFT market cap sits around $2.6 billion, but that's spread across millions of tokens. 95% of NFTs have basically zero value, yet blue-chip collections like CryptoPunks maintain massive premiums.

If you're looking at this space seriously, the pattern's clear: artist reputation, scarcity, and cultural moment matter way more than hype. The most expensive NFT projects aren't accidents—they're backed by either established artists or genuinely innovative mechanics. Worth keeping an eye on what's moving on Gate if you're tracking this sector.
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