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The Laszlo Hanyecz Bitcoin Pizza Transaction: The Meal That Became a $724 Billion Landmark
In 2010, a programmer named Laszlo Hanyecz made a casual post on a Bitcoin forum that would unknowingly alter the course of cryptocurrency history. “I’ll give 10,000 BTC for two pizzas,” he wrote—a simple proposition that seemed reasonable at the time when 10,000 bitcoins were worth approximately $25. Within hours, a forum member accepted the offer, ordered two Papa John’s pizzas, and arranged delivery to Laszlo’s residence in Florida. The transaction completed via command-line wallet marked something unprecedented: the first documented real-world commercial exchange using Bitcoin.
A Forum Post That Started a Revolution
What made Laszlo Hanyecz’s transaction so significant wasn’t the pizzas themselves, but what it represented. In 2010, Bitcoin remained largely theoretical—a digital experiment without proven real-world utility. Most of the cryptocurrency community debated whether Bitcoin would ever serve any practical purpose beyond speculation. Laszlo Hanyecz changed that narrative by taking the first concrete step: actually using Bitcoin as a medium of exchange for physical goods. He demonstrated that the technology could work outside of computer science forums and academic discussions. The transaction proved that cryptocurrency could facilitate legitimate commerce, even if the “merchant” was simply another enthusiast willing to arrange pizza delivery.
The Numbers Game: Then vs. Now
The mathematics of Laszlo Hanyecz’s decision have become the stuff of cryptocurrency legend—and tragedy. At the time of the transaction in May 2010, those 10,000 bitcoins represented roughly $25. Fast forward to March 2026, and Bitcoin trades at approximately $72,410 per coin, making that pizza transaction worth approximately $724 billion—a staggering sum for two Papa John’s pizzas.
Consider the perspective: Laszlo Hanyecz spent what was essentially pocket change for pizza. Today, that same amount would rank among the most expensive meals in human history. Financial analysts have speculated about the psychological toll of such decisions, though Laszlo himself has remained relatively philosophical about the exchange over the years.
May 22nd: When Crypto Turned Real
The date of Laszlo Hanyecz’s transaction—May 22, 2010—is now commemorated annually as Bitcoin Pizza Day. Every May 22nd, the cryptocurrency community reflects on this moment that symbolizes the gap between adoption and regret, between innovation and missed opportunity. The day serves as a memento of how far Bitcoin has traveled from those early days when transactions were experimental curiosities to today’s institutional recognition and mainstream adoption.
Laszlo Hanyecz’s legacy transcends the financial implications of his pizza purchase. He showed the world that Bitcoin could be more than digital scarcity—it could be a functioning currency for everyday exchanges. Whether he regrets the transaction remains an open question, but what’s certain is that his decision to trade 10,000 bitcoins for pizza remains the most significant—and most expensive—meal in the history of commerce.