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Just noticed something wild while digging into Bitcoin's history. On November 22, 2024, BTC hit $99,655 — basically touching six figures. But here's what really got me thinking: how much was Bitcoin actually worth back in 2009? The answer is almost unbelievable.
So let me take you back. Satoshi Nakamoto dropped the technical whitepaper in 2008, and the Bitcoin network went live in January 2009. But actual trading? That didn't start until October. The first real trades happened on October 5, 2009, and the bitcoin price in 2009 was absolutely microscopic — we're talking $0.00764 per coin. People were literally asking for 1,309 BTC just to get a single dollar. Wild.
If you'd grabbed just 10 BTC at that price and held until now, you'd be looking at over $960k in profit. Let that sink in for a second.
The price action from 2010 onwards tells an even crazier story. By end of 2010, BTC was at $0.30. Then 2013 happened — the cryptocurrency exploded 5,457% in a single year, reaching $751 by January and hitting $1,163 by November. But 2014 crushed it, dropping 57%. The volatility was insane.
2017 was another monster year with Bitcoin hitting $14,156 by year-end, but 2018 brought the pain again, crashing to $3,742. Then 2020 came through with a 302% pump to $28,949. Last year (2023) saw another 160% rally from $16,547 to $43,196.
We're now in 2026, and Bitcoin's trading around $80,480 right now. If you bought 10 BTC on January 1, 2024 at $43,196, you're already sitting on over $530k in gains. The bitcoin price in 2009 versus today isn't just a price comparison — it's a window into how insane this market has been.
The crazy part? We're still early compared to where this could go. The fact that we're even discussing Bitcoin's price history on mainstream platforms now shows how far we've come from those $0.00764 days.