Bitcoin's journey from virtually worthless to a major asset class tells quite a story. Here's how the price evolved on January 1st across the years:
The early days were wild swings. Back in 2010, Bitcoin was essentially free—barely tracked. By 2011, it had crept to $0.30. Then $5 in 2012. 2013 saw things accelerate to $13, but that was just the warm-up act.
The real moves came later. 2014 exploded to $770, then contracted sharply to $314 in 2015—a 60% wipeout that made believers question everything. Recovery arrived in 2016 at $434, followed by the legendary 2017 bull run landing at $1,019 on New Year's Day.
But 2018 was brutal. The price jumped to $15,321 before the year turned into a bloodbath. 2019 saw it settle at $3,794—survivors call this the "capitulation bottom." From there, the trajectory shifted upward. 2020 opened at $7,193. 2021 became unforgettable: $29,352. The cycle peaked in 2022 at $47,025.
Then came the cool-off. 2023 dropped to $16,630—another harsh correction. But momentum returned. 2024 kicked off at $42,660. Last January saw an explosive open at $93,500—a multi-year high. And 2026 started around $87,500, still commanding serious altitude compared to the pre-2020 era.
These numbers reveal Bitcoin's defining trait: extreme volatility wrapped around an unmistakable uptrend. Each major drawdown felt apocalyptic; each recovery proved the bears wrong.
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RebaseVictim
· 3h ago
Wow, from a few cents to over 90,000, this wave of increase is really outrageous… Every time there's a crash, everyone says it's over, but it bounces back again. When will this cycle end?
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ChainDoctor
· 3h ago
Look at this data, from just a penny to now... truly lucky, the early adopters who got in are probably just relaxing and winning now.
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TaxEvader
· 3h ago
Hey, that early wave was really a gambler's game...
$0.30 to now 87,500, some people were already financially free...
That 2018 cut in half made me start doubting life, but luckily I didn't sell at a loss.
That's why Bitcoin is a belief, not an investment...
It seems like volatility is something that can never be changed; we just rely on it to make a living.
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VCsSuckMyLiquidity
· 3h ago
The 60% crash in 2015... I really saw how many people around me just ran away. Now these people are back again, haha.
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GasFeeCrier
· 3h ago
Talking again about Bitcoin's story from a few cents to over ninety thousand, I'm tired of hearing this rhetoric, but I still have to admit... it's truly impressive.
Bitcoin's journey from virtually worthless to a major asset class tells quite a story. Here's how the price evolved on January 1st across the years:
The early days were wild swings. Back in 2010, Bitcoin was essentially free—barely tracked. By 2011, it had crept to $0.30. Then $5 in 2012. 2013 saw things accelerate to $13, but that was just the warm-up act.
The real moves came later. 2014 exploded to $770, then contracted sharply to $314 in 2015—a 60% wipeout that made believers question everything. Recovery arrived in 2016 at $434, followed by the legendary 2017 bull run landing at $1,019 on New Year's Day.
But 2018 was brutal. The price jumped to $15,321 before the year turned into a bloodbath. 2019 saw it settle at $3,794—survivors call this the "capitulation bottom." From there, the trajectory shifted upward. 2020 opened at $7,193. 2021 became unforgettable: $29,352. The cycle peaked in 2022 at $47,025.
Then came the cool-off. 2023 dropped to $16,630—another harsh correction. But momentum returned. 2024 kicked off at $42,660. Last January saw an explosive open at $93,500—a multi-year high. And 2026 started around $87,500, still commanding serious altitude compared to the pre-2020 era.
These numbers reveal Bitcoin's defining trait: extreme volatility wrapped around an unmistakable uptrend. Each major drawdown felt apocalyptic; each recovery proved the bears wrong.