VOLUME PROFILE · VOLUME AT PRICE
Where did the most Bitcoin trade?
Some prices see a mountain of trading and others barely any. Traced over the years, the busiest prices glow bright: the ones the market keeps coming back to.
Each column is a point in time and the vertical axis is price. Bright bands mark the prices where the most Bitcoin has traded, and the pale line is the price itself over time. Pick a timeframe or drag across the chart to zoom into any stretch, and hover to read the price at your cursor.
Every bar is a price range, and its height is how much Bitcoin has traded there over the years. The tallest bar, the brightest zone, is the price the market has kept returning to most.
What's the read right now?
Two prices the market keeps returning toMore Bitcoin has traded around $97.4K than anywhere else, and a second heavy band sits near $61.4K. These are the prices buyers and sellers keep coming back to, so trading tends to slow down and change hands there rather than rush straight past.
As of 2026-07-02, across every day of trading since 2011.
Where did trading concentrate?
$59.7K–$63.2KHeaviest-traded zone4.4% of all trading landed in this band$94.6K–$100KAlso heavy3.7% of all trading$44.8K–$47.4KAlso heavy2.7% of all tradingWhat sits above and below today?
$44.8K–$47.4KNearest heavy zone belowaround $46.1K, 26% under today's price, where trading tends to slow$94.6K–$100KNearest heavy zone abovearound $97.4K, 56% over today's price, where trading tends to slowWhat would change this read?
Heavy zones build up slowly. A new one forms when the price spends a long stretch somewhere and a lot of Bitcoin changes hands, and an old one only fades if the market drifts far away and stays there. Between the heavy zones sit thinner stretches the market tends to pass through quickly. On daily data those thin patches are the least certain part of the read, so treat them gently.
Built from each day's trading, so this shows where volume most likely piled up by price range, not every single trade. The totals are added up across major exchanges, so read the shape, not the exact dollar figure.
Understanding Volume Profile (Volume at Price)
Every day, some prices see a lot of Bitcoin change hands and others see almost none. Stack up all that trading by price and you get a volume profile, a map of where the market has done the most business. Analysts also call it volume at price.
This page draws that map two ways. The heatmap shows every point in time at once: the up-and-down axis is price, the brighter bands are the prices where the most Bitcoin traded, and the pale line is the price itself moving through them. The bar chart underneath is the all-time shape, where the tallest bar is the single price the market has traded around most.
The heavy zones matter because a price where a lot of trading has already happened tends to pull the market back. Buyers and sellers have unfinished business there, so the price often slows down and changes hands rather than shooting straight through. The single busiest price is sometimes called the point of control.
Because this is built from each day's trading rather than every individual trade, treat it as neighborhoods, not exact addresses: it shows where trading most likely piled up by price range. The totals are added up across major exchanges, so read the shape of the map, not the exact dollar figure. It updates every day as new trading comes in.