What is the current price of bitcoin?

As of 8 a.m. ET, the price of bitcoin, or 1 BTC, was $67,341.34. The crypto’s highest intraday price in the past year was $73,750.07 on March 14, 2024.

Bitcoin chart

The chart above pulls data as of 8 a.m. ET daily and doesn’t display intraday highs or lows.

Bitcoin prices

*The return comparisons are as of 8 a.m. ET.

Bitcoin’s all-time high was $73,750.07 on March 14, 2024. Its lowest intraday price in the past year was $29,720.31 on Oct. 22, 2023. Bitcoin is up 120% year over year.

The original crypto had humble beginnings in January 2009. Today, it has a market cap of $1.33 trillion.

Bitcoin is becoming a popular alternative to government-backed fiat currencies, such as the U.S. dollar. Fiat currencies tend to lose value over time due to inflation.

What is bitcoin?

Bitcoin launched the world’s first blockchain-based network to make financial transactions. It’s powered by millions of global users. Anyone with internet access can make financial transactions without banks or government intermediaries.

Every transaction on the blockchain is validated by miners. Miners use high-powered computers to solve complex math problems and create new blocks in the chain. They’re paid with newly created BTC for their work maintaining the network.

In the years since its launch, thousands of cryptocurrencies have tried to recreate bitcoin’s success. While some have grown rapidly, none have matched bitcoin’s value or popularity.

What determines bitcoin’s price?

Bitcoin prices aren’t connected to tangible assets. They depend entirely on supply and demand.

New bitcoin is released to miners when they verify transactions. The total supply is capped at 21 million BTC.

With a fixed supply, increased demand can drive prices upward. Demand depends on investor sentiment, which explains the crypto’s volatility.

Bitcoin’s starting price

The first bitcoin transaction occurred in late 2009, when 5,050 BTC traded for $5.02. At the time, the price of 1 BTC was about a tenth of a cent.

Bitcoin halvings

Each time 210,000 blocks of transactions are added to the bitcoin blockchain, the network automatically undergoes a process known as halving.

Bitcoin miners receive a set amount of BTC as a reward for their services to validate a block. But that reward is cut in half each time a halving occurs. In other words, about once every four years, bitcoin miners get a 50% pay cut.

Bitcoin halving is essential in limiting bitcoin’s supply and theoretically supporting its price.

Does bitcoin halving increase BTC’s price?

Less new bitcoin should ostensibly push up prices. But that doesn’t always happen.

A halving doesn’t directly impact prices, so it isn’t a guaranteed bullish catalyst. In the past, BTC prices hit a bottom about a year before the next halving. They then rose for more than a year after the halving. But that doesn’t necessarily mean the pattern will repeat.

A history of bitcoin prices

2010 – 2019

The first online bitcoin exchanges emerged in 2010. The price per coin grew from the $1 threshold in 2011.

From there, BTC prices continued to climb, reaching the $1,000 mark in late 2013. Its popularity and trading volumes snowballed four years later.

In November 2017, bitcoin reached $10,000 and peaked at over $20,000 roughly a month later. The rally was partly driven by CME Group’s announcement to launch the first bitcoin futures contracts in December 2017.

Enthusiasm for the original crypto cooled in 2018, with BTC prices dropping below $4,000.

2020 – 2024

The next notable bitcoin boom occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. This time, BTC’s rise was partly driven by government shutdowns of sports, casinos, and other leisure and entertainment options and multiple rounds of government stimulus checks that left many Americans with extra disposable income.

But rising interest rates cooled investor enthusiasm in 2022, with a flight away from riskier assets like cryptocurrency.

Falling crypto prices in 2022 exposed overleverage among crypto lenders, hedge funds and exchanges. A string of crypto industry layoffs and bankruptcies weighed on bitcoin prices in 2022.

But it wasn’t too long before the original crypto began to rebound. Bitcoin’s rally resumed in 2023 and continues to climb.

On March 14, 2024, bitcoin reached an all-time intraday high of $73,750.07.

How to buy bitcoin

Investors can buy bitcoin on popular cryptocurrency exchanges, such as Binance, Coinbase and Kraken.

Any investor buying bitcoin directly must store their BTC in a bitcoin wallet. It’s similar to storing paper money in a physical wallet. In this case, bitcoin investors store the privacy keys needed to send or receive cryptocurrency in the wallet.

Bitcoin wallets can be hardware wallets that resemble USB sticks or software wallet apps that store BTC on a smartphone or another device.

Hot wallets are bitcoin wallets that are connected to the internet. In contrast, cold wallets are not connected to the internet. Hot wallets are considered more convenient than cold ones but riskier because of online access.

Read more: How to buy bitcoin

Bitcoin ETFs

In addition to buying bitcoin directly, investors can indirectly speculate on the bitcoin market via bitcoin funds.

In January 2024, the SEC also approved several bitcoin spot ETFs. These funds hold the cryptocurrency rather than crypto futures contracts and trade on major U.S. exchanges.

The approval of bitcoin exchange-traded funds represents a resounding institutional validation of the cryptocurrency, marking a departure from its initial reputation as a speculative and volatile asset.

Frequently asked questions (FAQs)

Bitcoin’s all-time high was $73,750.07, which it reached on March 14, 2024.

Since bitcoin exchanges launched in 2010, BTC’s lowest recorded price was $0.04865 on July 14, 2010, according to CoinMarketCap. That said, bitcoin reportedly traded on online forums for just $0.00099 per BTC in 2009.

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