ReadsWho Owns the CoinsWallets by SizeHow many addresses hold between 10 and 100 Bitcoin?

ADDRESSES WITH A BALANCE BETWEEN 10 AND 100 BTC

How many addresses hold between 10 and 100 Bitcoin?

Larger holders, from ten coins up. Some are people, some are companies.

Updated 10 hours ago
maketomaketo.com/indicator/wallets-10-to-100-btc050.0K100.0K200920122015201820212024TODAY130.2K addresses

The number of addresses that hold between 10 and 100 Bitcoin, over the years.

  1. What's the latest count?

    About 130,000 addresses

    hold between 10 and 100 Bitcoin.

    Larger holders, from ten coins up.

  2. But addresses aren't people.

    An address is a slot on the blockchain, not a person or a wallet. One person can control thousands of addresses; a single exchange holds millions of customers' coins in just a few. Coins that are lost forever still count here too. So read this as a count of addresses, never a headcount of people.

  3. How much Bitcoin is that, and what share of the whole?

    130,000
    addresses hold between 10 and 100 Bitcoin
    4.2 million BTC
    held by this group
    $265B
    value today, at the latest price
    21.10%
    of all the Bitcoin in the world
  4. Is this group growing or shrinking?

    The number of addresses that hold between 10 and 100 Bitcoin has held roughly steady over the last couple of years. The chart at the top tracks it across the whole history. It is one lens on whether this slice of the ownership ladder is filling up or thinning out.

Ownership by Size
The full picture: every wallet size in one view.
1 to 10 BTC
Committed holders past a whole coin.
100 to 1,000 BTC
The big-holder tier.

Understanding Addresses With a Balance Between 10 and 100 BTC

This page counts the addresses holding between 10 and 100 Bitcoin: sizeable positions worth well into the millions of dollars. It is where individual holders start to blur with businesses, and this tracks the count over time.

An address is not a person, and that gap widens as balances grow. At this size, exchanges, funds, and companies hold customers' coins inside single addresses, so this count sits above the number of individual owners by an amount no one can measure exactly.

The trend still tells a story. When this tier fills out, more large positions are forming; when it thins, big balances are moving, splitting, or being spent.