OpenSea makes changes to fees following tension with Blur

Quick Take

  • OpenSea said it was dropping fees citing a “massive shift in the NFT ecosystem.”
  • OpenSea’s tweet comes shortly after NFT marketplace Blur put out a blog post making the case for creators to list on Blur and not OpenSea. 

OpenSea is dropping fees, citing a shift in the NFT ecosystem and coming shortly after Blur made its case for creators to list on its platform rather than OpenSea.

OpenSea, the largest NFT marketplace, tweeted on Friday that it had started “started to see meaningful volume and users move to NFT marketplaces that don’t fully enforce creator earnings.” 

OpenSea cited events such as NFT marketplace Blur’s decision to roll back creator earnings and the “false choice they’re forcing creators to make between liquidity on Blur or OpenSea.” 

The CEO of Blur made a case for creators to list on that marketplace and not OpenSea in a blog post on Wednesday. Creators can’t earn royalties on Blur and OpenSea simultaneously, according to that post.  

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OpenSea said it was dropping its fee to 0% for a period of time while also moving to a 0.5% “creator earnings model, with the option for sellers to pay more.” 

The marketplace is also allowing sales using competitors with the same policies, so creators won’t have to make the choice between receiving earnings on OpenSea or Blur, it tweeted.  

“This is the start of a new era for OpenSea,” the marketplace tweeted. “We’re excited to test this model and find the right balance of incentives and motivations for all ecosystem participants — creators, collectors, and power buyers and sellers.” 


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About Author

Sarah is a reporter at The Block covering policy, regulation and legal happenings. Before, Sarah was a reporter with CQ Legal writing about securities regulation, which is where she first started reporting on crypto. Sarah has also written for The Bond Buyer and American Banker, among other finance-related publications. She graduated from the University of Missouri and earned a degree in print and digital journalism. Sarah is based in Washington D.C., and is an avid coffee lover. You can follow her on Twitter @ForTheWynn.

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