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Bitcoin’s Key Numbers 2025: The Data Behind the World’s Digital Reserve Asset

“Numbers don’t predict Bitcoin — they reveal its logic.” – DNA Crypto Knowledge Base.

As Bitcoin continues its post-halving cycle in 2025, the world’s first decentralised digital asset is once again proving why it remains the benchmark for trustless, programmable money.
Every new cycle brings noise — but Bitcoin’s fundamentals remain anchored in mathematics, scarcity, and adoption.

Below are the key numbers defining Bitcoin’s 2025 market landscape — and what they tell us about where the asset may be heading next.

Learn more: Institutional Bitcoin Adoption

1. 21 Million – The Immutable Supply Cap

Bitcoin’s maximum supply of 21 million coins will never change.
As of April 2025, over 19.68 million BTC (about 93.7%) have been mined. That leaves fewer than 1.32 million BTC yet to enter circulation — a pace that will continue to slow every four years through the halving cycle.

This scarcity is what makes Bitcoin antifragile — the harder it is to obtain, the stronger its demand becomes.

Explore: Bitcoin Market Dynamics

2. 2024 Halving – Supply Cut, Demand Surge

The fourth Bitcoin halving, completed in April 2024, reduced block rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC.
This event halved the rate of new supply, creating a structural imbalance between shrinking issuance and rising institutional demand through spot ETFs.

Historically, Bitcoin has seen its strongest price performance 12–18 months after halving, setting the stage for a potential new all-time high by late 2025 or early 2026.

Read: Global Impact of MiCA

3. 1 Million+ – Daily Active Wallets

The number of active Bitcoin wallets now exceeds 1 million per day, the highest since 2021.
Growth is being driven by:

  • Institutional participants using custodial cold wallets

  • Retail users adopting Layer-2 payment solutions

  • Stablecoin interoperability via cross-chain bridges

Bitcoin’s network activity reflects real economic use, not speculation.

See: Crypto Custody Solutions

4. €92,000 – Current Trading Range (Q2 2025)

As of May 2025, Bitcoin is trading between €78,000 and €92,000, consolidating after strong Q1 ETF-driven gains.
Despite volatility, Bitcoin has outperformed gold, equities, and most fiat currencies in the post-halving period — reinforcing its position as a macro hedge and liquidity reserve.

Institutions remain net buyers, signalling long-term conviction in its store-of-value thesis.

More: MiCA and Investor Protections

5. $60 Billion – ETF Holdings (as of April 2025)

Spot Bitcoin ETFs have accumulated over $60 billion in holdings since their launch.
This shift marks a new era of regulated institutional access to Bitcoin, with ETF inflows now serving as a key market indicator — similar to the transformation of gold after the introduction of the first US gold ETFs in 2004.

ETF accumulation also smooths volatility by introducing structured, compliant liquidity into the market.

Learn more: MiCA Licensing Explained

6. 18,000+ – Global Bitcoin Nodes

Bitcoin remains the most decentralised financial network ever built, with over 18,000 nodes active worldwide.
Each node enforces the consensus rules independently — verifying every transaction, every block, and every wallet.

This decentralisation is Bitcoin’s core defence against censorship and centralisation — the principle that keeps it borderless and incorruptible.

Explore: DeFi and MiCA Regulation

7. €1.6 Trillion – Market Capitalisation

As of Q2 2025, Bitcoin’s market cap has surpassed €1.6 trillion, making it the 10th-largest asset globally — ahead of Meta and just behind silver.
This ranking reinforces Bitcoin’s transformation from a speculative technology to a global monetary network, recognised by investors, institutions, and even governments.

Read: Institutional Tokenisation

The Bottom Line

Bitcoin’s story continues to be written in numbers — scarcity, decentralisation, adoption, and resilience.
While markets fluctuate, the math behind Bitcoin remains unchanged: fixed supply, rising demand, and transparent governance.

The longer institutions hold, the more those numbers begin to resemble not just market data, but monetary law.

Image Source: Adobe Stock
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or investment advice.

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