
Table of Contents
Can AKT Become a Core Layer of the Decentralized AI Cloud?
Akash spent years facing the same problem that follows almost every decentralized infrastructure token: the network could grow without the token necessarily capturing much of that growth.
That problem changed on March 23, 2026.
With the activation of Burn-Mint Equilibrium, or BME, compute demand on Akash is no longer separated from AKT demand in the same way it was before. Customers can still work with stable, dollar-denominated compute pricing. Providers can still avoid taking raw token volatility on every workload. But under the new mechanism, compute transactions route through AKT: the token is bought and burned to create ACT, the stable settlement asset used inside the system.
That is a much stronger investment thesis than “AI needs GPUs, therefore AKT goes up.”
It is also not enough on its own.
Akash still has to prove that developers actually want its compute at scale, that providers will bring enough useful GPU capacity onto the marketplace, and that real spend grows fast enough for token burns to matter. Right now the project has a better economic design than it had three months ago. The usage data, however, still describes an early network rather than a decentralized cloud giant.
That tension is where an honest Akash Network price prediction has to begin.
BTCUSA previously examined why Akash could become an infrastructure layer for decentralized AI compute. This updated forecast focuses on a narrower question: now that compute activity is directly tied to AKT burn pressure, what price ranges can the token realistically defend between 2026 and 2030?
Akash Network Price Prediction 2026–2030 At A Glance
AKT currently trades near $0.80, with a market capitalization of roughly $230 million and a fully diluted valuation close to $300 million, depending on the live market snapshot. That makes Akash small enough for meaningful upside if its new economic model works.
It does not make the old targets of $60 or $90 credible without extraordinary evidence.
Using the reported maximum-supply benchmark of approximately 388.54 million AKT, a $5 token implies a valuation near $1.94 billion. A $10 token implies approximately $3.89 billion. Those are ambitious outcomes, but they are not impossible for a network that successfully captures a measurable piece of the decentralized AI compute market.
A $60 AKT price would imply roughly $23.31 billion on the same benchmark. A $90 token would imply nearly $34.97 billion. Akash is nowhere near producing the marketplace activity needed to defend those levels today.
Our revised scenario model is therefore much lower than the previous article, but more useful.
| Year | Bear Case | Base Case | Bull Case | Main Question |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $0.35–$0.60 | $0.75–$1.25 | $1.50–$2.25 | Does BME create visible token demand while network usage stabilizes? |
| 2027 | $0.30–$0.70 | $1.00–$1.75 | $2.25–$4.00 | Can leases, GPU supply and compute spend recover together? |
| 2028 | $0.40–$0.90 | $1.30–$2.50 | $3.25–$6.00 | Does Akash become a repeat-use AI infrastructure marketplace? |
| 2029 | $0.50–$1.10 | $1.75–$3.25 | $4.50–$8.00 | Can the network build enough usage for burn economics to matter structurally? |
| 2030 | $0.60–$1.50 | $2.00–$4.50 | $5.50–$10.00 | Has Akash earned a durable position in decentralized cloud compute? |
The base case does not assume that Akash replaces AWS, Google Cloud or Microsoft Azure. It assumes something more realistic: Akash becomes a usable, repeatable marketplace for selected AI inference, agent, container and GPU workloads where open access and cost matter.
The bull case requires a much stronger result. It requires Akash to turn its AI compute narrative into sustained marketplace spend, deeper provider supply and a burn mechanism large enough to influence AKT scarcity over time.
AKT Today: A Small Valuation With A Newly Rebuilt Economic Loop
At the end of May 2026, AKT trades far below its previous all-time high of approximately $8.07. CoinGecko places the token around $0.80, while DeFiLlama shows reported circulating supply near 292.08 million AKT and a reported maximum-supply benchmark near 388.54 million AKT.
| Metric | May 29, 2026 Snapshot |
|---|---|
| AKT Price | Approximately $0.80 |
| Market Capitalization | Approximately $230 million |
| Fully Diluted Valuation | Approximately $300 million |
| Circulating Supply | Approximately 292.08 million AKT |
| Reported Max-Supply Benchmark | Approximately 388.54 million AKT |
| Previous All-Time High | Approximately $8.07 |
Those market numbers make AKT look inexpensive compared with many AI-linked crypto assets. But price alone is not a thesis. The network still needs evidence that its revised token economics can be fed by real commercial activity.
The most important change is that Akash now has a cleaner value path than it had when stablecoin payments reduced direct demand for AKT.
The official Akash explanation of Burn-Mint Equilibrium describes the old trade-off clearly: stable pricing made the network easier for customers and providers to use, but it weakened the token’s position inside the actual compute economy. BME was introduced to keep dollar-denominated settlement while making AKT essential to the payment flow again.
That changes the AKT forecast.
Before BME, investors could reasonably ask whether network activity would ever produce meaningful token demand.
After BME, the question is different: will enough compute activity happen for that token demand to become financially meaningful?
Why The Previous AKT Forecast Needed A Full Reset
The previous version of this page projected:
| Year | Previous Bear Case | Previous Base Case | Previous Bull Case |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | $7 | $12 | $18 |
| 2027 | $10 | $18 | $28 |
| 2028 | $15 | $25 | $40 |
| 2029 | $20 | $38 | $55 |
| 2030 | $30 | $60 | $90+ |
Those targets were not anchored tightly enough to either supply or usage.
Using approximately 388.54 million AKT as a reported supply benchmark, the previous 2030 base case of $60 would imply about $23.31 billion of valuation. The previous $90 bull case would imply close to $34.97 billion.
| AKT Price | Implied Valuation Using 388.54M AKT Benchmark |
|---|---|
| $0.80 | Approximately $311 million |
| $1.00 | Approximately $389 million |
| $2.00 | Approximately $777 million |
| $5.00 | Approximately $1.94 billion |
| $8.07 | Approximately $3.14 billion |
| $10.00 | Approximately $3.89 billion |
| $20.00 | Approximately $7.77 billion |
| $60.00 | Approximately $23.31 billion |
| $90.00 | Approximately $34.97 billion |
This table does not say that Akash can never reach a very large valuation. It says the burden of proof rises quickly.
A network with a few hundred million dollars of valuation can move sharply if adoption inflects. A network valued above $20 billion would need to be a serious infrastructure business in crypto terms, with large, persistent compute demand and an economic mechanism visibly reducing effective token supply.
The previous article relied too heavily on the size of the AI market and not enough on Akash’s actual share of that market.
This revision takes the opposite approach: begin with the network as it is, then ask what needs to improve for each price band to become defensible.
Burn-Mint Equilibrium Is The Real AKT Thesis Now
Akash’s most important development in 2026 was not a partnership announcement or another AI narrative cycle. It was Mainnet 17.
Burn-Mint Equilibrium went live on March 23, 2026, after Proposal 318 passed governance. Under BME, customers buy compute through a stable settlement experience, while the system routes economic demand through AKT.
The simplified loop works like this:
- A tenant wants compute capacity on Akash.
- The payment flow buys AKT from the market.
- AKT is burned to mint ACT, a non-transferable USD-denominated settlement token.
- ACT remains inside the settlement system for the workload.
- Providers can redeem ACT back into AKT at the market price when settlement occurs.
- If AKT appreciates between funding and redemption, the system can produce net AKT burn.
This is not the same type of buyback-and-burn model used by a trading protocol such as Hyperliquid. Akash does not simply collect trading fees and permanently remove an equivalent stream of tokens. BME is a settlement mechanism, and net supply reduction depends on compute activity and token-price movement within the conversion loop.
That nuance matters.
It would be wrong to describe every dollar of Akash compute spending as guaranteed permanent deflation of equal value. It would also be wrong to dismiss the upgrade. Every unit of compute demand now requires AKT interaction, and the first post-upgrade data already showed token removal.
According to Messari’s State of Akash Q1 2026 report, 53,520 AKT had been burned through BME by March 31, only eight days after the upgrade became active. The official Akash Q1 2026 report also described BME as the largest tokenomics upgrade in the network’s history and said the network’s cumulative compute spend crossed $5 million during the first quarter.
That is a legitimate economic improvement.
Now it needs scale.
Akash Usage Data Still Shows An Early Network
The most bullish version of the AKT story is easy to describe: AI inference expands rapidly, developers look for flexible GPU access, Akash supplies open-market compute and BME converts growing spend into recurring demand for AKT.
The present data is less dramatic.
Messari reported that Akash created 43,540 new leases in Q1 2026, up 27.1% quarter over quarter and marking a third consecutive quarter of sequential growth. That is encouraging.
The rest of the quarter was mixed:
| Q1 2026 Network Metric | Result |
|---|---|
| New Leases | 43,540, up 27.1% QoQ |
| Average Active Leases | 583, down 4.4% QoQ |
| Lease Revenue | $253,250, down 45% QoQ |
| Total Network Fees | $257,580, down 44% QoQ |
| Average GPU Usage | 84 GPUs, down 57.4% QoQ |
| Average GPU Availability | 334 GPUs, down 57.5% QoQ |
| Average GPU Utilization | 33.7% |
| Average Active Providers | 58, down 8.4% QoQ |
| AKT Burned Through BME By March 31 | 53,520 AKT |
The network was not standing still. The tokenomics changed, lease creation improved and AI agent workloads were beginning to arrive late in the quarter. Yet the usage base remains small relative to the valuation implied by aggressive AKT targets.
The live Akash Network Stats dashboard showed approximately 1.09 thousand active leases and 144 GPUs in use when checked on May 29, suggesting activity improved from the Q1 average. Because the dashboard updates continuously, those figures should be treated as a current snapshot rather than a permanent operating level.
Still, the direction matters. A price forecast can become more constructive if BME adoption coincides with rising leases, more useful GPU capacity and stronger compute spend.
What it cannot do is skip straight from 144 GPUs in use to a $20 billion network valuation without showing the bridge.
Akash Sits In A Real AI Infrastructure Sector, Not An Empty Narrative
There is a reason investors keep returning to decentralized compute.
AI has made access to computing infrastructure more strategic, more expensive and more physical. Models need GPUs, memory, power, cooling and reliable deployment environments. That pushes the AI story below applications and model releases into the infrastructure layer.
BTCUSA has previously mapped how Akash, Render and Bittensor occupy different parts of the decentralized AI compute stack. The distinction is important:
| Network | Primary Thesis |
|---|---|
| Akash | Open cloud marketplace for deployable compute workloads |
| Render | Distributed GPU processing and rendering/AI workloads |
| Bittensor | Incentivized markets for machine intelligence and model outputs |
Akash is not trying to price intelligence itself. That is closer to the Bittensor thesis around decentralized AI networks and subnets.
Akash is trying to sell infrastructure.
That makes AKT easier to judge over time. If customers need containers, inference environments, agents or GPU resources and actually pay to run them on Akash, the marketplace should show it. Leases, active capacity, compute spend and BME activity are all measurable.
The challenge is that cloud infrastructure is brutally competitive. A developer may appreciate decentralization in theory, but production workloads still depend on uptime, documentation, observability, privacy guarantees, networking and support. Price matters. Reliability often matters more.
Akash does not need to replace hyperscalers to work. It does need to become a dependable choice for a slice of AI compute demand large enough to support token value.
AI Agents And Distributed GPUs Could Be The Most Important Growth Path
Training frontier AI models is not the only market worth pursuing. In many ways it may be the hardest one for a decentralized provider marketplace to win.
Inference, agent workloads and smaller specialized deployments may fit Akash better.
They can be distributed across more kinds of hardware. They do not always need enormous tightly coupled GPU clusters. They may benefit from lower-cost capacity, geographic distribution and a deployment market that is open to smaller developers.
This is why the Homenode and Akash Agents initiatives matter.
Akash Homenode opens a supply route for consumer and prosumer GPUs, initially including hardware such as RTX 4090, RTX 5090 and RTX 6000 Ada cards. If this develops into reliable capacity for inference workloads, it could widen the supply base beyond professional providers alone.
There is also a broader market signal here. BTCUSA recently covered Pavel Durov’s Cocoon launch as another attempt to build a decentralized AI compute layer. The existence of competing networks is a risk for Akash, but it also validates the category: more teams are trying to coordinate distributed hardware because AI compute access has become a real bottleneck.
At the other end of the market, the infrastructure buildout is becoming enormous. BTCUSA also examined how xAI’s roadmap ties model growth to increasingly large compute and infrastructure demands. Akash will not compete directly with the largest dedicated AI clusters. Its opportunity is different: serve the growing long tail of workloads that cannot or do not want to live entirely inside hyperscaler infrastructure.
That is the credible AKT thesis. Not that Akash becomes the whole AI cloud. That it becomes useful enough, often enough, for compute demand to burn meaningful AKT.
The Valuation Model For AKT After BME
AKT should now be evaluated through four variables:
| Variable | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Compute Spend | BME requires network activity before token demand can grow |
| Active Leases And Repeat Workloads | One-off deployments are less valuable than persistent usage |
| GPU Supply And Utilization | AI demand cannot scale if useful capacity is unavailable |
| Net AKT Burn | The token thesis strengthens only when BME materially affects effective supply |
The model is not the same as a software company revenue multiple. Akash is a decentralized marketplace with a token settlement system, not a company distributing cash flows to shareholders.
But market-cap discipline still matters.
The reported maximum-supply benchmark of approximately 388.54 million AKT offers a useful way to ask whether long-term targets make sense. BME burns can reduce effective supply under favorable conditions, while future mint dynamics may also matter. Therefore the benchmark is not a perfect prediction of 2030 supply. It is a conservative valuation reference point.
| AKT Price | Implied Valuation Benchmark | What It Would Suggest |
|---|---|---|
| $1.00 | Approximately $389 million | BME receives early credit, but Akash remains a small infrastructure token |
| $2.00 | Approximately $777 million | Marketplace growth becomes visible and AI demand improves sentiment |
| $3.00 | Approximately $1.17 billion | Akash is treated as a serious decentralized compute contender |
| $5.00 | Approximately $1.94 billion | Usage and net burn are meaningfully stronger than current levels |
| $8.07 | Approximately $3.14 billion | Return to prior all-time-high valuation territory |
| $10.00 | Approximately $3.89 billion | Strong bull-case infrastructure adoption |
| $20.00 | Approximately $7.77 billion | Akash becomes a leading crypto AI infrastructure asset |
| $60.00 | Approximately $23.31 billion | Requires enormous, sustained marketplace scale |
| $90.00 | Approximately $34.97 billion | Extreme outcome unsupported by current activity |
The target that matters most is not $60 or $90. It is $5.
A $5 AKT price would place the token around a $1.94 billion valuation benchmark. That is still nearly an order of magnitude above the current market cap, but it is within a range the market could defend if Akash shows several years of real compute adoption and meaningful BME-driven token demand.
Akash Network Price Prediction 2026: BME Gets Its First Market Test
2026 is the transition year.
For most of the quarter before Mainnet 17, the network was still operating under a model in which usage and AKT demand were not tightly aligned. BME only became active on March 23. Any price forecast for the year has to admit that the new token economics have very little operating history.
The constructive case is that early burn data, improving late-quarter lease activity and renewed attention around decentralized AI infrastructure draw buyers back to AKT. The cautious case is that the market initially rewards the tokenomics upgrade, then demands proof that compute spend is actually accelerating.
| 2026 Scenario | AKT Price Range | Valuation Using 388.54M Benchmark | What Would Drive It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear Case | $0.35–$0.60 | $136M–$233M | AI narrative cools, network revenue stays weak, BME impact remains small |
| Base Case | $0.75–$1.25 | $291M–$486M | Activity stabilizes, burns continue and market gives partial credit to new tokenomics |
| Bull Case | $1.50–$2.25 | $583M–$874M | Leases and GPU activity rise sharply while AI infrastructure assets re-rate |
Our base-case range for 2026 is $0.75 to $1.25.
That may appear modest compared with the previous article’s $12 target, but it reflects the state of the network. Akash now has a better economic engine. It has not yet demonstrated the volume of compute demand that would justify a multi-billion-dollar valuation this year.
Akash Network Price Prediction 2027: Usage Must Become Repeatable
By 2027, BME will have had enough time to be tested properly.
Investors should no longer be satisfied with a new economic mechanism or isolated spikes in lease creation. The key question will be whether users deploy again, whether providers bring back useful capacity and whether AI workloads remain on the network after early experimentation fades.
This is also the period where token markets may begin separating real AI infrastructure from projects that mainly borrowed the narrative. The broader consolidation of developer activity across AI-crypto infrastructure tokens matters for AKT because the market is unlikely to reward every decentralized AI project equally. Execution will determine which assets hold their premium.
| 2027 Scenario | AKT Price Range | Valuation Using 388.54M Benchmark | What Would Drive It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear Case | $0.30–$0.70 | $117M–$272M | Limited repeat demand, provider capacity stays thin, burns remain economically minor |
| Base Case | $1.00–$1.75 | $389M–$680M | Stable marketplace growth and clearer BME-linked AKT demand |
| Bull Case | $2.25–$4.00 | $874M–$1.55B | Strong agent/inference demand and material GPU supply expansion |
A move toward $4 would be meaningful. It would not require Akash to dominate decentralized compute, but it would require a clear shift from a small experimental marketplace into a platform with credible recurring usage.
Akash Network Price Prediction 2028: Can The Network Reach Billion-Dollar Credibility?
By 2028, AKT should not be trading mainly on the promise that AI needs compute. Everybody will already know that.
What the market will need to know is whether Akash captures enough of that demand to matter.
The most important evidence would be:
- persistent growth in compute spend;
- a larger and more reliable provider network;
- materially higher GPU utilization without supply collapsing;
- recurring AI inference and agent workloads;
- net AKT burn that is visible relative to supply;
- developer tooling that makes deployment less fragile than earlier decentralized-cloud experiences.
This stage is where Akash can earn a billion-dollar-plus valuation benchmark. It is also where the thesis breaks if its best use cases remain occasional or niche.
| 2028 Scenario | AKT Price Range | Valuation Using 388.54M Benchmark | What Would Drive It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear Case | $0.40–$0.90 | $155M–$350M | Marketplace remains niche and centralised alternatives retain most demand |
| Base Case | $1.30–$2.50 | $505M–$971M | Akash becomes a recognized smaller AI compute marketplace |
| Bull Case | $3.25–$6.00 | $1.26B–$2.33B | Repeat AI workloads and BME burns materially strengthen the token thesis |
A $5 target begins to look defensible only in this type of time frame, and only if operational data improves substantially.
At $5, AKT would be valued around $1.94 billion using the supply benchmark. That is far above today’s market valuation, but still within a plausible range for an infrastructure asset with real marketplace demand, a functioning token burn path and a credible place in the AI compute stack.
Akash Network Price Prediction 2029: The Cloud Thesis Needs Economic Weight
If Akash reaches 2029 with clear growth, the discussion may change.
The network would no longer be evaluated simply as an emerging DePIN or AI token. It could start to be evaluated as a functioning open cloud marketplace with a token economy attached to real computing demand.
That is a large leap. It requires more than marketing around cheap GPUs. It requires infrastructure reliability.
Customers running AI agents, inference services or persistent applications need predictable uptime, stable settlement, logs, networking, observability and enough provider choice that one operator failure does not disrupt their product.
Akash has been building in that direction through its deployment tooling, Homenode, BME and programmable cloud roadmap. The market will eventually judge whether those pieces became a coherent product rather than a series of promising upgrades.
| 2029 Scenario | AKT Price Range | Valuation Using 388.54M Benchmark | What Would Drive It |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear Case | $0.50–$1.10 | $194M–$427M | Network survives but fails to build meaningful market share |
| Base Case | $1.75–$3.25 | $680M–$1.26B | Akash becomes a persistent niche infrastructure network |
| Bull Case | $4.50–$8.00 | $1.75B–$3.11B | Strong AI workload growth and substantial burn-driven token demand |
The upper bull range approaches Akash’s previous all-time-high valuation territory. That comparison is useful. AKT does not need a $20 billion valuation to revisit its historical price peak. It needs the market to believe the upgraded network is worth roughly $3 billion and that the BME model is converting usage into a durable token thesis.
Akash Network Price Prediction 2030: Can AKT Become A Real Decentralized Cloud Asset?
By 2030, investors should be able to answer the basic question.
Did Akash become a meaningful cloud layer for AI applications, or did it remain a technically interesting marketplace that never reached sufficient scale?
A successful outcome does not require Akash to defeat AWS. That benchmark is both unrealistic and unnecessary. Cloud markets are large enough for specialist alternatives, especially for open-source developers, AI agents, inference workloads and teams seeking lower-cost or more flexible infrastructure.
The long-term token case depends on whether those customers use Akash in sufficient numbers for BME to matter.
| 2030 Scenario | AKT Price Range | Valuation Using 388.54M Benchmark | What Would Need To Be True |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bear Case | $0.60–$1.50 | $233M–$583M | Akash remains relevant but too small for strong token repricing |
| Base Case | $2.00–$4.50 | $777M–$1.75B | Repeat compute demand grows and burn economics gain credibility |
| Bull Case | $5.50–$10.00 | $2.14B–$3.89B | Akash becomes a leading decentralized AI cloud marketplace with material usage |
Our base-case AKT forecast for 2030 is $2.00 to $4.50.
That range assumes the network continues to operate, expands real workloads, improves its provider and GPU capacity base, and proves that compute demand produces meaningful AKT burn pressure over time.
The bull case reaches $5.50 to $10.00. That would represent a major success, but it is still far more defensible than the previous $60 to $90 framework. At $10, AKT would imply a valuation benchmark of approximately $3.89 billion, roughly in line with a successful, category-leading decentralized compute asset rather than a global cloud platform.
Why This Forecast Does Not Use $60 Or $90 As Base Targets
A low token price can make high targets feel deceptively easy.
At around $0.80, a move to $5 sounds aggressive but conceivable. A move to $60 can look like a typical crypto bull-market multiple if viewed only through unit price.
Market-cap arithmetic tells a different story.
| AKT Price | Implied Valuation Benchmark | Scale Required |
|---|---|---|
| $2 | Approximately $777 million | Visible but still early marketplace adoption |
| $5 | Approximately $1.94 billion | Strong decentralized compute traction |
| $10 | Approximately $3.89 billion | Leading crypto AI infrastructure outcome |
| $20 | Approximately $7.77 billion | Major sector leadership with significant marketplace scale |
| $60 | Approximately $23.31 billion | Extremely large, durable cloud-market relevance |
| $90 | Approximately $34.97 billion | Exceptional outcome unsupported by present metrics |
Akash can become much more valuable without becoming a $35 billion asset.
The strongest editorial mistake in the previous framework was treating the size of the total AI compute market as though it automatically translated into AKT valuation. Infrastructure markets are enormous. Capturing them is difficult. Akash needs workloads, not just a sector narrative.
Catalysts That Could Move AKT Toward The Bull Case
BME Produces Material And Persistent Net Burns
The token economics are now far better aligned with usage than before. But the market will want proof that burns grow beyond an early post-upgrade milestone.
If compute spend rises and BME removes a meaningful amount of effective supply over multiple quarters, AKT can begin trading as a real usage-linked infrastructure token rather than an AI narrative asset.
Active Leases And Compute Spend Accelerate Together
New lease growth matters, but revenue and workload quality matter more.
A bull case requires more tenants running longer, higher-value deployments. If lease counts increase while revenue remains weak, the network may be gaining experimentation rather than economically valuable demand.
GPU Capacity Returns And Utilization Improves
Akash needs supply to win demand. In Q1, average GPU availability contracted sharply while utilization remained around one-third.
A healthier network would show both more suitable GPU capacity and stronger use of that capacity. Homenode could help, particularly for inference and distributed agent workloads, but reliability and performance have to hold up in practice.
AI Agents Become A Real Workload Category
Akash may not need to win frontier model training. Agentic workloads and inference could be a better fit for open distributed compute.
If one-click agent deployments become persistent workloads rather than demos, Akash gains a clearer path to recurring spend and BME activity.
Decentralized Compute Becomes A Selective Winner
The market may eventually stop rewarding every AI token equally and begin separating infrastructure that is being used from infrastructure that is merely discussed.
Akash would benefit from that shift if its measurable activity improves. Its economic story is now easier to prove than it was before BME.
Risks That Could Keep AKT Below The Base Case
BME Is Economically Elegant But Too Small To Matter
BME fixes a real design weakness: usage now touches AKT again.
But if marketplace spend remains modest, the token burn may still be too small relative to supply and market liquidity to change valuation materially. Good mechanics cannot replace insufficient demand.
Provider Capacity Remains Thin
An open compute marketplace is useful only if it has the hardware customers actually want. The decline in active providers and GPU availability during Q1 is a warning sign.
If developers cannot reliably access appropriate GPUs, they may experiment once and return to centralized alternatives.
Centralized Clouds Keep The Better Workloads
AWS, Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure and specialized GPU clouds offer integrated support, mature tooling, networking, enterprise procurement and service-level expectations that decentralized platforms still need to match.
Akash can win selected workloads without beating hyperscalers. But it still needs a meaningful niche.
Competition Fragments Decentralized Compute Demand
Akash does not own the decentralized AI infrastructure narrative. Other networks are pursuing GPUs, inference, confidential compute, AI agents and distributed resource coordination.
Competition can validate the sector while also making it harder for any one token to earn a premium.
Crypto Valuations Disconnect From Usage
Even if Akash improves, AKT remains a crypto asset. Liquidity conditions, Bitcoin dominance and sector rotations can overwhelm operating progress for long periods.
That means a fundamentally stronger Akash network does not guarantee a smooth AKT price path.
Metrics To Watch Before The Next AKT Forecast Update
A useful forecast should identify the data that would force it to change.
| Indicator | Bullish Signal | Warning Signal |
|---|---|---|
| Compute Spend | Continues growing after BME activation | Stalls despite AI narrative interest |
| Net AKT Burn | Becomes material across several quarters | Remains too small to affect supply dynamics |
| Active Leases | Expands with longer-lived workloads | Increases only through short-lived tests |
| Lease Revenue | Grows alongside lease count | Continues falling despite more deployments |
| GPU Usage | Rises with reliable capacity growth | Remains small or supply keeps shrinking |
| Active Providers | Stabilizes and expands | Continued provider consolidation |
| AI Agent Workloads | Become persistent deployments | Remain demos or short campaigns |
| Developer Tooling | Reduces deployment friction | Production users still prefer centralized cloud |
AKT does not need every metric to improve at once. It does need enough of them moving in the same direction to justify moving from a few hundred million dollars of valuation toward several billion.
Frequently Asked Questions
What Is The Akash Network Price Prediction For 2026?
Our updated base-case Akash Network price prediction for 2026 places AKT between $0.75 and $1.25. A stronger bull case of $1.50 to $2.25 would require visible growth in marketplace activity, increasing token burns after the BME upgrade and stronger demand across decentralized AI infrastructure assets.
What Is The Akash Network Price Prediction For 2030?
Our base-case AKT forecast for 2030 is $2.00 to $4.50. In a stronger adoption scenario, where Akash develops sustained AI compute demand, materially higher GPU usage and meaningful burn-driven token economics, AKT could reach $5.50 to $10.00.
Can Akash Network Reach $5?
Yes. A $5 AKT token would imply approximately $1.94 billion of valuation using the reported 388.54 million supply benchmark. That is ambitious from current levels, but potentially defensible if Akash becomes a meaningful decentralized compute marketplace and BME produces sustained token demand.
Can AKT Return To Its Previous All-Time High?
AKT previously reached an all-time high near $8.07. Returning to that level would imply a valuation benchmark of approximately $3.14 billion. That is possible only under a strong long-term adoption scenario with materially larger compute spend, stronger provider supply and visible BME-driven burn effects.
Can AKT Reach $10?
AKT can reach $10 in a strong bull-case outcome, but that target should not be treated as routine. At the reported supply benchmark, $10 implies approximately $3.89 billion of valuation. Akash would need to establish itself as one of the leading decentralized AI compute networks and demonstrate real recurring marketplace activity.
Can Akash Network Reach $60 Or $90?
Those targets are not supported by present network activity. A $60 AKT price would imply approximately $23.31 billion of valuation using the reported supply benchmark, while $90 would imply nearly $34.97 billion. Akash would need extraordinary global marketplace scale before those levels could be defended analytically.
What Is Burn-Mint Equilibrium On Akash?
Burn-Mint Equilibrium is the economic model activated through Akash Mainnet 17 on March 23, 2026. Under BME, compute transactions route demand through AKT: the system buys and burns AKT to create ACT, a stable settlement asset used between customers and providers. This allows stable compute pricing while reconnecting network usage to AKT demand.
Does Every Akash Compute Transaction Permanently Reduce AKT Supply?
Every compute transaction now interacts with the BME process, but net supply reduction is more nuanced than a simple permanent burn of every dollar spent. AKT is burned to mint ACT, while providers can redeem ACT into AKT at the market price during settlement. Net deflation depends on activity and price movement within the system.
What Are The Main Risks For AKT?
The main risks are weak compute demand, limited provider and GPU capacity, insufficient net burn, continued dominance by centralized clouds, competition from other decentralized compute networks and wider crypto market weakness.
Is AKT A Good Long-Term AI Infrastructure Investment?
AKT now has a stronger token-economic case than it did before the BME upgrade because compute activity is directly linked to token demand. However, Akash remains an early marketplace with mixed usage data and significant execution risk. Long-term investors should monitor compute spend, net burn, active leases, GPU supply and provider growth rather than relying only on AI narrative momentum.
BTCUSA Insight
Akash did something important in March: it fixed the most awkward gap in its investment case.
Before BME, the network could grow while AKT sat off to the side, useful for staking and governance but not clearly necessary to the flow of compute spending. Now the link is sharper. Compute demand touches the token. Usage can create burn pressure. The market finally has something concrete to measure.
But a better mechanism is not the same as a finished business.
Akash still has a small operating footprint, uneven provider capacity and a lot to prove against cloud incumbents and rival decentralized networks. Its opportunity is real because AI is turning compute access into one of the most valuable infrastructure problems in technology. Its risk is just as real: a huge market does not automatically create a huge marketplace.
That is why the sensible AKT target is not $60 or $90. The first meaningful test is $5.
If Akash can grow repeat workloads, rebuild GPU supply and show that BME burns compound with genuine compute demand, a multi-billion-dollar valuation becomes a serious discussion. If those metrics do not improve, the token can remain cheap for a reason.
Methodology: This forecast uses the official Akash Burn-Mint Equilibrium documentation and the official Akash Q1 2026 report for the BME upgrade and network developments; Messari’s State of Akash Q1 2026 report for quarterly leases, revenue, GPU usage, provider counts and initial BME burn data; the Akash live statistics dashboard for live network activity; and DeFiLlama’s AKT market data for reported supply, market capitalization and FDV reference points observed around May 29, 2026. Price ranges are scenario estimates and not investment advice.
