pull down to refresh

Report sample size: 3538
Key findings:
  • 18.6% of respondents claimed to own bitcoin.
  • 4.21% of respondents claimed to hold bitcoin in self-custody.
  • Bitcoin ownership continues to skew younger and more male than the general U.S. population.
  • Bitcoin ownership shifted slightly to the political right, but remains distributed across the entire political spectrum and mostly centrist.
There's a lot of cool stuff in the report (13 pages long) and Troy Cross has a nice thread on X summarizing it.
Some interesting graphics from the report:
twatter thread shared here #1021434 I thought ~charts_and_numbers was more appropriate… you'll find more chards from the original tweet and direct link to download the full report in PDF
Should I have posted it here in ~bitcoin instead?
reply
sorry I missed your post. It didn't come up as a dupe, nor in related. ~charts_and_numbers is probably a better spot, I should have posted there.
reply
102 sats \ 1 reply \ @supratic 3 Jul
yeah I shared the twat and this is the link to the site. Curious to notice how we prioritize information differently!
reply
i usually go for the site if I can get it rather than a twitter link, mostly because I find it kind of unpleasant to open twitter links.
reply
I always get kinda suspicious with these reports, feels like one of those where you just go, ‘Nice try, Fed.’
reply
or the people who will answer honestly are not representative of the average bitcoiner you find on SN.
reply
data accuracy is aways a dilemma, who completed the survey and the data inputs also could change a lot. Anyhow, it gives an idea, I'd not accept it as a truth if I cannot validate the data myself
reply
102 sats \ 0 replies \ @Riberet 21h
I really wonder how much truth there is in these reports?
reply
This will always be very difficult to quantify and it should be that way
reply
Nice website!
reply
0 sats \ 0 replies \ @nout 12h
The upper bound is 170M as that's the size of the current UTXO set. Now many people control keys to more than one UTXO (often they control hundreds) and then of course exchanges own many of those, so the upper bound on actual folks self custodying is much smaller. My guess would be that the actual number is somewhere between 1M and 10M worldwide.
reply