If you bought just $1 of Bitcoin when it launched 17 years ago, how rich would you be toda
February 1, 2026
The question resurfaces every time Bitcoin hits another high: what would your money look like now if you’d bought in at the beginning? With thecryptocurrencytrading at $78,693.76 per coin as of early February 2026, the arithmetic of Bitcoin’s earliest years has become almost unfathomable, not because it is complex, but because the scale no longer feels real. Bitcoin was launched on 9 January 2009, largely ignored outside cryptography forums and niche online communities. There was no official dollar exchange rate, no mainstream awareness, and no expectation that it would become a global financial asset. Early adopters were not making calculated investments so much as experimenting with a digital curiosity. Yet even modest sums committed during that period would now be worth extraordinary amounts.
Budget 2026
What $1,000, or even $1, would be worth today
Someone who invested $1,000 in Bitcoin around 2010, when coins were trading for fractions of a dollar, and managed to hold onto them, would today be sitting on well over $1.5 billion, depending on the precise purchase date. The difference a few years made is stark. Financial analysts cited by Bankrate have estimated that the same $1,000 invested five years later, in 2015, would today be worth around $497,000 (approximately £360,000).Still substantial, but no longer life-altering on the same scale. Even smaller sums tell a similar story. Transaction data suggests that in Bitcoin’s earliest days, $1 could buy roughly 1,000 bitcoins. At today’s price, that single dollar would now be worth around $78.7 million.
The pizza that became legend
Bitcoin’s mythology is inseparable from its most famous early transaction.On 22 May 2010, a programmer paid 10,000 bitcoins for two pizzas from a Papa John’s in Florida, worth roughly $25 at the time.The transaction took place after Laszlo Hanyecz offered 10,000 Bitcoin on an online forum in exchange for someone ordering and delivering the pizzas to him.It was the first known real-world purchase using Bitcoin and was treated largely as a novelty. Today, however, those same 10,000 BTC would be worth around $787 million, making it widely regarded as the most expensive pizza purchase in history. The date is now commemorated annually as “Bitcoin Pizza Day”
Missed fortunes and lost keys
Not all missed Bitcoin fortunes were the result of disbelief. Some were lost through simple misfortune. One of the most widely reported cases is that of a man from Newport, Wales, who believes a hard drive containing 7,500-8000bitcoins was accidentally thrown away in 2013. The device is thought to be buried somewhere in a landfill site. At current prices, the missing Bitcoin would be worth around $700 million. Despite repeated proposals to excavate the site, the hard drive has never been recovered.
Lily Allen and the offer she turned down
Some opportunities were declined openly, and later publicly regretted. In 2009, singer Lily Allen was offered 200,000 bitcoins to perform a virtual concert on the online platform Second Life. At the time, the cryptocurrency was barely established, and the offer was worth only a few hundred dollars. Allen declined. Five years later, as Bitcoin’s value surged, she acknowledged the decision on social media, writing on X (then Twitter) in 2014: “About 5 years ago someone asked me to stream a gig live on Second Life for hundreds of thousands of Bitcoins, ‘as if’ I said. #idiot #idiot.”At today’s price, those 200,000 bitcoins would be worth around $15.7 billion, a sum that doesn’t just eclipse the lifetime earnings of most global pop stars, but utterly dwarfs them.For context, Taylor Swift, often dubbed the queen of pop, has an estimated net worth of around $1.6 billion as of late 2025/early 2026. Allen has since spoken candidly about her finances and career, but the episode remains one of the most frequently cited examples of Bitcoin’s early-dismissed value.
A currency that rewrote scale
Bitcoin did not rise smoothly. Its history is marked by sharp crashes, regulatory fears, forgotten passwords, and lost wallets.Many early holders sold long before prices reached today’s levels; others no longer have access to their coins at all. What remains striking is not just how much early investors could have made, but how little separated them from those who didn’t. In Bitcoin’s first years, the difference between generational wealth and nothing at all was often a matter of timing, belief, or a discarded hard drive. Fifteen years on, the numbers are no longer speculative. They are historical.
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