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I've been watching Bitcoin's recent price action pretty closely, and there's something worth discussing here. Right now BTC is sitting around $68.4K after hitting an all-time high of $126K not too long ago. But here's what's interesting to me - the conversation around bitcoin price in 2035 is becoming increasingly serious among institutional players.
Looking back at how we got here, Bitcoin's journey has been nothing short of wild. Started basically worthless in 2009, hit $1 in 2011, then we saw that first major bubble in 2013 when it broke $1,000. The real turning point came in 2017 when it pumped to $20K - that's when mainstream media finally paid attention. By 2021, we were talking about $69K during that institutional adoption wave, and now we're seeing even higher peaks.
What strikes me most is how the narrative has shifted. Bitcoin isn't just some speculative asset anymore. Governments and mega-corps are actually treating it as a treasury reserve. That's a massive shift from even five years ago.
If I had to think about what bitcoin price in 2035 might look like, I'd consider a few scenarios. The base case for the next few years (2025-2027) seems to be somewhere in the $150K-$300K range, assuming we keep seeing institutional inflows and regulatory clarity improves. By 2028-2030, if adoption continues spreading through developing markets for remittances and financial inclusion, we could be looking at $400K-$700K territory.
The really interesting part? The 2031-2035 window. If Bitcoin actually achieves some kind of global reserve status - and I know that sounds extreme - we're potentially talking seven figures. The math is simple: fixed supply of 21 million coins, increasing demand, shrinking new supply from halvings. That's just scarcity economics.
Of course, there are real obstacles. Energy consumption criticism isn't going away. Regulatory backlash in major economies could absolutely derail things. Competition from other crypto projects with specific use cases could fragment the market. And volatility remains a genuine concern for anyone actually trying to use Bitcoin for transactions rather than speculation.
But here's what I keep coming back to - Bitcoin has survived multiple "death spirals" and regulatory crackdowns. It's proven more resilient than most people expected. The trend toward institutional adoption seems irreversible at this point. Whether we hit those optimistic price targets or not, the direction seems pretty clear.
The question isn't really whether Bitcoin will matter in 2035. It's whether the world will have fully integrated it as a financial cornerstone by then. And honestly, watching the current trajectory, that seems more likely than not.