Top 5 Most Expensive NFTs Ever Sold & What They Are Worth in 2026

Top 5 Most Expensive NFTs Ever Sold & What They Are Worth in 2026

Key Highlights:

  • In 2021, NFTs saw a great boom but these assets have seen massive value drop.
  • Top NFTs like The Merge, Everydays, and CryptoPunks made headlines.
  • The NFT space has matured and is shifting focus.

Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) boomed back in 2021 and it was something that turned digital art into a multi-billion dollar frenzy. During this time, everything from art and music to virtual real estate was converted into valuable blockchain-based assets. What started out as a niche concept turned into a global frenzy, with collectors, celebrities and investors pouring billions into the space almost overnight.

NFTs made the headlines everyday with record-breaking sales, overnight millionaires and it was basically growing a belief that NFTs could redefine how we assign value in the digital world.

Sadly, the hyper matured and the market started to make moves. By 2026,  the focus moved away from pure speculation and toward real utility, with projects emphasizing long-term value, community, and practical use cases. Many of the once-iconic NFTs that sold for staggering amounts have seen their valuations drop sharply, indicating a broader correction in the market.

With this blog, we will take a closer look at the five most expensive NFTs that were ever sold. Here we will also be looking at the prices where they stand today.

Most Expensive NFTs Ever Sold

The five most expensive NFTs ever sold came straight out of the wild 2021 hype cycle, when digital art, crypto money and internet culture collided. Prices were and to be honest they were somewhat unbelievable. Big auction houses like Christie’s and Sotheby’s jumped in, crypto whales flexed, and traditional collectors were feeling the FOMO as they did not want to miss the next big thing.

Fast forward to 2026, the vibes have changed. The market has not disappeared but the easy-money speculation has definitely cooled off. Many of these headline grabbing NFTs are now sitting idle as their prices have dropped significantly.

The Merge-Pak

The Merge was created by Pak, and it holds the title of being the most expensive NFT sale in history. It was bought for $91.8 million on December 2, 2021. What made it special was how it was sold and who owned it.

There was no single collector for this particular NFT but it was bought by about 29,000 people, who together purchased more than 312,000 units (called mass), starting at $575 each. The more units someone owned, the larger their presence was felt within the art space. It was less like buying a painting and more like owning a growing digital organism. Critics even argue that it should not be called as the most expensive NFT as the total comes from a lot of buyers and not a single one.

However, the numbers tell a different story. The individual units of The Merge trade at a fraction of their original value. The Merge NFT collection floor price is roughly $47-$57 per unit based on recent market data as per CoinGecko.

Everydays- Beeple

Everydays: The First 5000 Days by Beeple (real name Michael Winkelmann) is one the most iconic NFTs that have been sold and easily one of the defining moments of the 2021 boom. The artwork is a massive collage of 5,000 digital pieces, each created daily over more than 13 years, starting in 2007. What made it special was not just its visuals but because the artist turned consistency into cultural artifact.

The NFT was sold for $69.3 million at Christie’s on March 11, 2021, after starting out at just $100. The final buyer was Vignesh Sundaresan, a crypto investor known as MetaKovan, who paid using 42,329 ETH.

This sale was not just big but it was considered to be historic. It marked the first time a purely digital NFT artwork was sold by a major auction house, pushing NFTs into the global spotlight and signalling that digital art could stand alongside traditional masterpieces.

As of 2026, the piece has not been resold, so there is no confirmed current price. However, based on the broader NFT market decline, its estimated value is believed to be significantly lower than its peak.

Clock- Pak & Julian Assange

Clock by Pak in collaboration with Julian Assange is where NFTs stepped out of art and straight into activism. The piece is exactly what it sounds like, a live digital timer counting the number of days Assange has been imprisoned. It updates continuously, turning time itself into the artwork. Simple idea, heavy message.

The NFT was sold for $52.7 million (around 16,593 ETH) in February 2022, again not to a single buyer but to a collective called AssangeDAO, a decentralized group formed specifically to support Assange. The funds were used for his legal defense, making this one of the few NFTs where buying it was also a political statement.

What made Clock unique was not rarity or aesthetics, it was purpose. Ownership here was not about flexing wealth, it was about backing a cause.

As of 2026, it has not been resold and does not really function in a typical market. There’s no floor price, no active trading, just symbolic value. It’s less of an asset now and more of a statement frozen in time.

HUMAN ONE- Beeple

HUMAN ONE by Beeple pushed NFTs beyond  screens into the physical world. Called “the first human portrait born in the metaverse,” it blends a 7-foot kinetic sculpture with ever-changing digital visuals.

The piece shows a futuristic astronaut walking through shifting dystopian landscapes across four screens. What makes it unique is that it never stays the same, Beeple can update it remotely, making it a living artwork.

It sold for $28.9 million at Christie’s in November 2021. As of 2026, it remains privately held with no resale, and its value is likely down with the broader NFT market.

CryptoPunk #5822

CryptoPunks #5822 is one of the rarest NFTs ever sold, featuring an “Alien” type, only 9 exist in the entire collection. It was bought for $23.7 million in 2022, making it one of the most expensive NFT sales.

Its value came from extreme rarity, early NFT history, and status appeal during the hype cycle. As of 2026, the collection’s floor price has dropped significantly, reflecting the broader market cooldown. CryptoPunk’s current price currently stands at $54,606 as per CoinGecko

What Happened to NFTs?

The 2021 NFT boom felt too much like a mania, easy money, memestocks, and hype drove people into buying JPEGs, while celebrities like Snoop Dogg and Eminem amplified the FOMO. Platforms like OpenSea saw massive volume spikes, but scams, hacks, and the FTX collapse shook trust.

Post-crash, the space matured. Projects shifted toward utility, linking NFTs to gaming tickets, and real-world assets. While most NFTs have lost value, blue chip collections like CryptoPunks still hold cultural weight, especially among serious collectors.

Also Read: Taking a Look at Metaverse Real Estate NFTs & Why They Failed

See more
Harsh Chauhan
Written by Harsh Chauhan
Harsh Chauhan is an experienced crypto journalist and editor at CryptoNewsZ. He was formerly an editor at various industries, including his tenure at TheCryptoTimes, and has written extensively about Crypto, Blockchain, Web3, NFT, and AI. Harsh holds a Bachelor of Business Administration degree with a focus on Marketing and a certification from the Blockchain Foundation Program. Through his writings, he holds the pulse of the rapidly evolving crypto landscape, delivering timely updates and thought-provoking analysis. His commitment to providing value to readers is evident in every piece of content produced. With a deep understanding of market trends and emerging technologies, he strives to bridge the gap between complex blockchain concepts and mainstream audiences.