BTC

Bitcoin Is Dead

Favorite Embed
Buy Bitcoin…

Timeline of public declarations predicting Bitcoin’s failure, compiled from media, analysts, and commentators over the years

Bitcoin Death Predictions

Date Price Title Publication Author Quote
4/16/2013 $68.36 Useless As A Store Of Value Twitter David Heinemeier Hansson So to recap: Bitcoin has swung from $265 to $60 in less than a week. Useless as a store of value,...
4/13/2013 $93 Paul Krugman: Bitcoins Would Have Been Consider... Huffpost Paul Krugman Now here we are in a world of high information technology — and people think it’s smart, nay cutt...
4/12/2013 $117 The Bitcoin Bubble Has Burst Whistling In The Wind Robert Nielsen Well it has finally happened. We looked at those charts of ever rising price of bitcoin and said ...
4/11/2013 $124.9 Fool's Gold Slate Eric Posner Bitcoin is a Ponzi scheme—the Internet’s favorite currency will collapse.
4/5/2013 $142.32 Why Bitcoin Is Doomed To Fail Chron Alex Planes The very reasons why Bitcoin has taken off today will be major reasons why its value is likely to...
11/15/2011 $2.33 The Rise And Fall Of Bitcoin Wired Beyond the most hardcore users, skepticism has only increased. Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul...
8/9/2011 $9.99 The Bitcoin Is Dying. Whatever. Gizmodo Australia Adrian Covert So Bitcoin, we’ll remember the good times, like the time that one guy who got heat stroke while m...
7/13/2011 $13.95 Why Bitcoin Will Fail As A Currency The Calculating Investor calcinv Although I think that Bitcoin is ingenious and fascinating in many ways, I don’t believe that it ...
6/20/2011 $17.51 So, That's The End Of Bitcoin Then Forbes Tim Worstall Bitcoins aren’t secure, as both the recent theft and this password problem show. They’re not liqu...
6/7/2011 $23.92 Why Bitcoin Will Fail As A Currency Tav's Blog Tav Siva Because, by design, there will never be more than 21 million Bitcoins in existence. And thanks to...
5/8/2011 $3.87 Why Bitcoin Will Fail Apenwarr Avery Pennarun Like the gold standard, a successful bitcoin would send our economy back into the dark ages. . . ...
10/15/2010 $0.11 Why Bitcoin Can’t Be A Currency The Underground Economist The Underground Economist Negative feedback loops like this are basically homeostasis. In nature, positive feedback loops l...

Latest Bitcoin Is Dead snapshot

Explain with AI

Total Deaths

472

Highest Price at Death

$117924.48

Lowest Price at Death

$0.11

Last Updated

19 days

Newhedge Stats

Favorites

2

Alerts

0

What is The “Bitcoin Is Dead” Chart?

Few financial assets have been declared dead as many times as Bitcoin. Over the past decade and a half, major publications, famous economists, and market commentators have repeatedly announced its demise, and many times with remarkable confidence. 

 

The Bitcoin Is Dead chart documents these declarations. 
 

Popularized by sites like 99Bitcoins and BitcoinDeaths, this chart tracks each public obituary, listing the source, the quote, the date, and Bitcoin’s price at the time. When you look at it as a whole, it feels less like an objective analysis and more like a timeline of moments when fear peaked and strong opinions began to start sounding like permanent conclusions.

 

Among the contributors are respected outlets such as Forbes, Bloomberg, CNBC, and The Guardian. In fairness, these institutions were often reflecting prevailing market views during periods of severe volatility. However, the language used was frequently definitive: Bitcoin wasn't “under pressure,” or “structurally challenged,” but “dead.” This distinction really matters. 

When Do the Declarations Typically Happen?

The pattern is consistent. “Bitcoin is dead” headlines tend to emerge during three types of events.

1. Major Price Drawdowns

Bitcoin has experienced multiple historical drawdowns exceeding 70 to 80 percent. In traditional equity markets, that level of decline often precedes bankruptcy or permanent impairment. Applying that framework to Bitcoin has repeatedly led to the same conclusion.
 
For example:

2011: approximately 94% decline

2014 to 2015: approximately 85% decline

2018: approximately 84% decline

2022: approximately 77% decline

 
In each instance, obituary-style commentary increased significantly.

From a conventional market lens, the reaction is understandable. However, Bitcoin’s historical pattern has been cyclical rather than terminal. After each drawdown, the network continued operating, and new price cycles eventually formed.

2. Infrastructure Failures

Exchange collapses and custody failures have repeatedly triggered declarations of Bitcoin’s demise.


In 2014, Mt. Gox, which handled the majority of global Bitcoin trading volume at the time, filed for bankruptcy after disclosing that it had lost roughly 850,000 BTC, about 7% of the total supply then in circulation, worth approximately $473 million. The scale of the loss led many to view the event as a systemic failure for Bitcoin. Yet while the exchange collapsed, the Bitcoin network itself continued operating without interruption.


In 2022, the collapse of FTX produced similar headlines. Billions in customer funds were misused. Capital rapidly exited the bitcoin ecosystem, driving forced selling and sharp price declines. Bitcoin fell more than 70% from its prior highs. Once again, the narrative shifted from market stress to structural failure.


In both cases, the businesses failed. The protocol did not.


Throughout the Mt. Gox collapse, blocks continued to be produced roughly every ten minutes. During the FTX crisis, mining difficulty adjusted as designed. The supply schedule remained intact. Transactions continued to settle globally.


These events exposed weaknesses in centralized companies operating around Bitcoin. They did not expose a flaw in the underlying network itself.


Confusing infrastructure risk with protocol risk has repeatedly led to conclusions that proved broader than the evidence supported.

3. Regulatory Pressure

Regulatory crackdowns have repeatedly sparked predictions of Bitcoin’s end. A clear example came in 2021, when China imposed a sweeping ban on Bitcoin mining. At the time, China accounted for a substantial share of global hash rate. The immediate impact was severe. Hashrate dropped by more than 50% within weeks, and headlines framed the move as an existential blow.


In practice, mining activity relocated rather than disappeared. Operations migrated to the United States, Kazakhstan, and other jurisdictions. Within months, the hashrate recovered and eventually reached new highs. The network continued processing transactions and working as intended. 

What the Bitcoin is Dead Chart Actually Illustrates

The “Bitcoin Is Dead” chart serves as one of the most useful case studies in market psychology.

Financial markets tend to project recent trends far into the future. During strong uptrends, optimism becomes structural. During severe downturns, pessimism often becomes definitive. When losses compound and uncertainty increases, conclusions become more absolute.
 
The clustering of “death” declarations near cyclical lows suggests that these headlines reflect emotional extremes more than structural analysis.
 
The continued growth of the Bitcoin Is Dead chart is less an indictment of critics and more a reminder of how markets process uncertainty.
 
Strong language tends to appear when volatility peaks. That is not unique to Bitcoin, but Bitcoin’s price behavior amplifies the effect.
 
If future cycles resemble the past, new entries will likely be added to the chart. Whether those entries ultimately mark structural failure or simply another chapter in a volatile adoption curve remains to be seen.
 
So far, Bitcoin has continued producing blocks without interruption. The obituaries, however, have accumulated into a quiet graveyard of very confident opinions. 

Chat

You are commenting as a guest. .

G
Guest
wisesoundmoney140

Trump/Iran send us lower again

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

G
Guest
immutablecitadel298

Hello

Comment from Bitcoin Addresses with a Non-Zero Balance

8 July 2026

G
Guest
uncensorablepeer932

would be cool to see options trades in real time

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

drenchravine

Hello freedigitalgold

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

allderdice

Good start to the week

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

G
Guest
freedigitalgold489

Hi bitcoiners

Comment from Bitcoin Reachable Node Distribution Live Map

7 July 2026

G
Guest
wilddeflationary130

Saylor Sell Reversal

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

6 July 2026

G
Guest
uncensorableproofwork141

Hlo

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

5 July 2026

G
Guest
trustlessaustrian534

correlacion entre bitcoin y spcx

Comment from Bitcoin vs US Equities Correlation

1 July 2026

allderdice

About to reach prime mvrvz score, we are def reaching a bottom here

Comment from Bitcoin MVRV Z-Score

G
Guest
orangepilledmining815

What is the open interest and funding on bitcoin

Comment from Bitcoin Futures Open Interest - All Exchanges

G
Guest
soundtimestamp510

Is there an app

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

27 June 2026

alon

@sundybtcking with the Advanced plan you can download the data or pull via API and connect all the charts you want. Maybe we should add a sandbox to do it in the Newhedge UI?

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

sundybtcking

can i put the LTH and STH together

Comment from Bitcoin Long Term Holder Supply Change

G
Guest
sovereignmises734

⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⢀⣴⡆ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⢀⣶⣆⢀⠔⠁⠀⣷ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠚⣿⣿⣷⡄⠀⠀⢸ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⣠⣺⣿⣿⡇⠀⠀⠸ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⡸⣿⣿⣿⣿⡇⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⡔⠁⢸⣿⣿⣿⣿⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠌⠀⠀⠀⣿⣿⣿⣿⠀⠀⠀ ⠀⡌⠀⠀⠀⠀⢸⣿⣿⣿⡇⠀⠀ ⠈⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⢸⣿⣿⣿⡇⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⣾⣿⣿⣿⣷⠀⠀ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⣿⣿⣿⣿⣿⣷⣄ ⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠀⠛⠛⠛⠛⠛⠛⠉

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

25 June 2026

G
Guest
openuncensorable989

Everyone wanted to scoop up sats sub 60k well here we are

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

G
Guest
shadowselfcustody929

Bear market, time to buy

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

allderdice

Big move down now, what happened?

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

G
Guest
luckyfixed967

Big move up what happened?

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard

G
Guest
quickaustrian402

Btc

Comment from Bitcoin Dashboard