Bitcoin operates without a central owner, making the question "who owns Bitcoin" more complex than it appears at first glance. While no single entity controls the Bitcoin network itself, certainBitcoin operates without a central owner, making the question "who owns Bitcoin" more complex than it appears at first glance. While no single entity controls the Bitcoin network itself, certain
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Who Owns the Most Bitcoin in the World? Largest Holders Revealed

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May 8, 2026
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Bitcoin operates without a central owner, making the question "who owns Bitcoin" more complex than it appears at first glance. While no single entity controls the Bitcoin network itself, certain individuals, companies, and governments hold significant amounts of BTC.
This article explores Bitcoin's unique ownership structure, from the mysterious creator Satoshi Nakamoto to modern institutional investors and government holdings. You'll learn who owns the most Bitcoin, how BTC is distributed globally, and why Bitcoin's decentralized design prevents any single party from controlling the network.
  1. For a complete Bitcoin overview, see our ultimate guide to Bitcoin (BTC) for beginners.

Key Takeaways

  • Bitcoin has no central owner; it operates as a decentralized, open-source network maintained by a global community of users and developers.
  • Satoshi Nakamoto, Bitcoin's pseudonymous creator, holds an estimated 1.1 million BTC across approximately 22,000 wallet addresses that have remained untouched since 2010.
  • Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) leads corporate Bitcoin ownership with 818,334 BTC, while BlackRock's IBIT holds approximately 818,000 BTC for investors.
  • Individual investors collectively control 65.1% of Bitcoin's circulating supply, while businesses, ETFs, and governments hold smaller but significant portions.
  • The US government holds approximately 328,000 BTC — the world's largest government Bitcoin position — formally designated as the Strategic Bitcoin Reserve by executive order, though congressional approval remains pending.
  • Despite large holdings by individuals and institutions, no single entity can unilaterally control Bitcoin's protocol rules or network operations.

Who Is the Owner of Bitcoin? Understanding Satoshi Nakamoto

Bitcoin has no single owner. The software operates as an open-source project maintained by a global community of developers and users.
However, Satoshi Nakamoto, the pseudonymous creator of Bitcoin, published the Bitcoin white paper in October 2008 and launched the network in January 2009. Nakamoto mined approximately 1.1 million BTC during Bitcoin's earliest days, receiving block rewards of 50 BTC per block.
These coins have remained completely untouched since 2010, when Nakamoto handed control of the Bitcoin code repository to developer Gavin Andresen and disappeared from public communication. Despite numerous investigations and claims over the years, Satoshi Nakamoto's true identity remains one of technology's greatest mysteries.
While Nakamoto created Bitcoin, they don't "own" the network in any meaningful sense. Bitcoin operates through consensus among all participants, not through control by its founder.


Who Is Satoshi Nakamoto? Identity Theories and the 2026 Investigation


Who exactly is behind the Bitcoin pseudonym remains one of the biggest unsolved mysteries in technology.
Over the years, journalists and researchers have pointed to a handful of technically credible candidates — cryptographers who had the knowledge, the ideological alignment, and the documented early involvement to have built Bitcoin.
The most prominent names include Hal Finney, the first person to receive a Bitcoin transaction; Nick Szabo, creator of Bit Gold, an earlier digital currency prototype; and Len Sassaman, a cypherpunk cryptographer whose death in 2011 coincided with Satoshi's disappearance.
The most significant development came in April 2026, when investigative journalist John Carreyrou — the reporter who exposed the Theranos fraud — published a 10,000-word investigation in The New York Times pointing to Adam Back, a British cryptographer and CEO of blockchain company Blockstream, as the strongest Satoshi candidate.
Carreyrou cited stylometric analysis of Back's writing across cryptography mailing lists, overlapping timelines of online activity, and Back's creation of Hashcash in 1997 — the proof-of-work system that the Bitcoin white paper references directly as prior art.
Back denied the claims, as have all other Satoshi candidates. "Today's New York Times story is built on circumstantial interpretation of select details and speculation, not definitive cryptographic proof," Blockstream said in an official statement.
The mystery likely stays unresolved until Satoshi's coins move — or they don't.
Blockchain analysts at firms including Arkham Intelligence track approximately 22,000 wallet addresses attributed to Satoshi using what's called the "Patoshi Pattern," a unique mining signature from Bitcoin's earliest days.
As of 2026, these wallets hold roughly 1.1 million BTC — worth approximately $85 billion at April 2026 prices — and none of them have moved since 2010.


Who Owns the Most Bitcoin? Top Individual and Institutional Holders


1. Satoshi Nakamoto - The Largest Bitcoin Holder


Satoshi Nakamoto owns the most Bitcoin of any individual entity — an estimated 1.1 million BTC that has sat completely untouched since 2010, representing roughly 5.2% of Bitcoin's entire 21 million supply.
Blockchain analysis conducted by various researchers suggests Nakamoto mined these coins between January 2009 and mid-2010. Notably, except for a few test transactions, none of these Bitcoins have ever moved, making them effectively dormant.
If Satoshi's coins ever moved, it would likely cause significant market volatility and raise questions throughout the cryptocurrency community.
  1. Complete ranking: top Bitcoin holders and owners.


2. Notable Individual Bitcoin Whales


The Winklevoss twins, Cameron and Tyler, rank among the most prominent individual Bitcoin holders with approximately 70,000 BTC. They invested heavily in Bitcoin following their $65 million settlement with Facebook and founded the cryptocurrency exchange Gemini in 2015.
Tim Draper, a venture capitalist, holds at least 29,500 BTC purchased through a US Marshals auction in 2014. These coins were originally seized from the Silk Road marketplace.
Michael Saylor, co-founder and chairman of Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy), publicly disclosed owning 17,732 BTC personally in 2020, separate from his company's extensive holdings.
Individual
Estimated Holdings
Notes
Winklevoss Twins (Cameron & Tyler)
~70,000 BTC
Co-founders of Gemini exchange; acquired via Facebook settlement proceeds
Tim Draper
~29,500 BTC
Venture capitalist; purchased via US Marshals auction of Silk Road seizure, 2014
Michael Saylor (personal)
17,732 BTC
Strategy executive chairman; self-disclosed in 2020; separate from company holdings


3. Public Companies Holding Bitcoin


Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) holds 818,334 BTC as of early May 2026, making it the world's largest publicly traded Bitcoin holder by a wide margin.
That figure represents a 22% increase in holdings year-to-date in 2026 alone, according to a Strategy SEC filing from May 3, 2026.
The company acquired its Bitcoin at an average cost of roughly $75,537 per coin — a total investment of approximately $61.8 billion.
Under executive chairman Michael Saylor's direction, Strategy has funded these purchases primarily by raising debt and issuing equity, treating Bitcoin as a treasury reserve asset rather than a speculative trade.
Strategy's Bitcoin reserves now account for over 60% of all Bitcoin held by publicly traded companies worldwide.
  1. See who is actively buying Bitcoin right now.
Other notable corporate holders include Twenty One Capital with 43,514 BTC and Metaplanet — a Tokyo Stock Exchange-listed company — with 40,177 BTC as of Q1 2026, ranking it third among publicly traded companies behind Strategy and Twenty One Capital.
Metaplanet has publicly announced plans to accumulate 100,000 BTC by the end of 2026, following a model similar to Strategy's treasury approach.
Marathon Digital Holdings, a Bitcoin mining company, holds approximately 38,689 BTC generated primarily through its own mining operations.
Tesla retains approximately 11,509 BTC after selling a portion of its original $1.5 billion Bitcoin investment in 2022.
Entity
Holdings (2026)
Notes
Strategy (MicroStrategy)
818,334 BTC
World's largest public corporate holder; May 2026 SEC filing
Twenty One Capital
43,514 BTC
Bitcoin-native company; backed by Tether and SoftBank
Metaplanet
40,177 BTC
Tokyo Stock Exchange; targets 100,000 BTC by end 2026
Marathon Digital
38,689 BTC
Bitcoin miner
Tesla
11,509 BTC
Retained after partial 2022 sale


4. Bitcoin ETFs and Investment Products


BlackRock's iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) holds approximately 818,000 BTC as of early May 2026 — neck and neck with Strategy for the title of the largest single institutional Bitcoin holder globally.
The fund recorded net inflows on 48 of 62 trading days in Q1 2026, demonstrating that demand from institutional investors like pension funds and wealth managers has continued even through periods of Bitcoin price weakness.
BlackRock's fund now commands roughly 49% of total US spot Bitcoin ETF assets, far ahead of competing products from Fidelity and Grayscale.
IBIT's Bitcoin is held in custody by Coinbase Custody Trust Company, with Anchorage Digital serving as an additional custodian since April 2025.
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC) holds around 187,000 BTC as of 2025. Originally launched as a trust before converting to an ETF, Grayscale was among the first companies to create Bitcoin investment products.
Combined, ETFs and similar investment funds control approximately 1.5 million BTC, representing roughly 7% of Bitcoin's total supply.
Fund
Holdings (2026)
Notes
BlackRock iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT)
~818,000 BTC
Largest Bitcoin ETF globally; 49% of total US spot Bitcoin ETF assets; custodied by Coinbase Custody
Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (GBTC)
~187,000 BTC
Converted from trust to ETF; one of the earliest Bitcoin investment products
All US Spot Bitcoin ETFs (combined)
~1.5 million BTC
Approximately 7% of Bitcoin's total 21 million supply


5. Cryptocurrency Exchanges as Custodians


Major cryptocurrency exchanges hold substantial Bitcoin on behalf of their clients. These platforms don't own the Bitcoin themselves but maintain custody for millions of users who store their assets on the exchanges.
MEXC and other leading exchanges collectively hold approximately 12% of Bitcoin's total supply in custodial wallets. These holdings fluctuate as users deposit and withdraw Bitcoin for trading and investment purposes.
The largest known exchange wallet addresses contain hundreds of thousands of BTC, though the actual ownership belongs to individual exchange users rather than the platforms themselves.



Bitcoin Ownership Distribution: Who Owns Most of the Bitcoin?

Bitcoin ownership in 2026 shows a diverse distribution pattern across different holder categories. Individual investors control approximately 13.66 million BTC, representing 65.1% of the total supply.
Businesses and public companies hold 1.39 million BTC (6.6% of supply), while investment funds and ETFs control 1.49 million BTC (7.1% of supply). Government holdings account for 432,000 BTC (2.1% of supply).
An estimated 1.57 million BTC (7.5% of supply) is considered permanently lost due to forgotten private keys or discarded hardware. Satoshi Nakamoto's dormant holdings represent approximately 1.1 million BTC (5.2% of supply). Approximately 1.04 million BTC (4.9%) remains to be mined before reaching Bitcoin's 21 million supply cap.
Wallet address analysis reveals that four addresses contain between 100,000 and 1,000,000 BTC, while 82 addresses hold between 10,000 and 100,000 BTC. Bitcoin "whales" holding at least 10,000 BTC collectively control approximately 14% of the circulating supply, though this concentration remains lower than wealth distribution in traditional financial systems.


Which Countries Own the Most Bitcoin?

The United States is the world's largest known government holder of Bitcoin, with approximately 328,372 BTC acquired through law enforcement seizures over the past decade.
China maintains approximately 15,000 BTC seized from the Plustoken Ponzi scheme and related fraud operations, despite implementing a complete ban on cryptocurrency trading and mining within its borders.
Ukraine holds 46,351 BTC, while El Salvador owns 5,954 BTC acquired through its Bitcoin legal tender program, which launched in 2021 and remains active. The Kingdom of Bhutan accumulated 9,969 BTC primarily through state-sponsored Bitcoin mining operations using hydroelectric power resources.
Other government holders include Finland with 90 BTC and Georgia with 66 BTC.
Country
Estimated Holdings
Notes
United States
~328,372 BTC
World's largest government holder; formally designated as Strategic Bitcoin Reserve by executive order, March 2025
Ukraine
46,351 BTC
Accumulated through crypto donations and government seizures
Bhutan
9,969 BTC
State-sponsored mining using hydroelectric power resources
El Salvador
5,954 BTC
Acquired through Bitcoin legal tender program; launched 2021, remains active
China
~15,000 BTC
Seized from Plustoken Ponzi scheme and related fraud; crypto trading banned domestically
Finland
90 BTC
Law enforcement seizures
Georgia
66 BTC
Law enforcement seizures


The US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve


On March 6, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order formally establishing a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve, directing the Treasury Department to consolidate all government-held BTC into a single, permanently maintained reserve.
Most of that stockpile came from law enforcement seizures — most notably from the Silk Road marketplace shutdown in 2013 and the 2022 recovery of Bitcoin linked to the Bitfinex hack.
The order explicitly prohibits the government from selling its Bitcoin holdings, treating them as a long-term strategic asset — comparable to the country's gold or oil reserves.
A separate US Digital Asset Stockpile was also created for other seized cryptocurrencies such as Ethereum and Solana, which may be subject to eventual liquidation at Treasury's discretion.
As of May 2026, the reserve still awaits formal congressional approval to become permanent law. The executive order can be reversed by a future president, meaning the legal permanence of the reserve remains an open question that Congress is expected to address later in 2026.
Several US states have pursued parallel measures: Texas and New Hampshire have both introduced legislation for state-level Bitcoin reserve programs.



Who Owns the Bitcoin Network? Understanding Decentralized Ownership

Bitcoin's network operates without centralized ownership or control. Unlike traditional payment systems managed by banks or companies, Bitcoin functions through consensus among thousands of participants running Bitcoin software globally.
No single entity, including large bitcoin holders, can unilaterally change Bitcoin's protocol rules. Developers propose software updates, but miners, node operators, and users must voluntarily adopt these changes for them to take effect.
The Bitcoin.org domain, often mistaken for an "official" Bitcoin website, was originally registered by Satoshi Nakamoto and Martti Malmi in 2008. Today, multiple co-owners maintain the site as an independent open-source project, but it holds no special authority over Bitcoin itself.
This decentralized governance structure ensures Bitcoin remains resistant to censorship, manipulation, and control by governments or corporations. Even Satoshi Nakamoto's estimated 1.1 million BTC in holdings provide no special influence over Bitcoin's technical development or network operation.


Frequently Asked Questions About Bitcoin Ownership

Q: Who is the biggest owner of Bitcoin?
Satoshi Nakamoto remains the biggest known holder with approximately 1.1 million BTC across roughly 22,000 wallet addresses — none of which has moved since 2010.


Q: Who owns the most Bitcoin in 2026?
As of 2026, the top holders are Satoshi Nakamoto (~1.1M BTC, dormant), Strategy/MicroStrategy (818,334 BTC), and BlackRock's IBIT (~818,000 BTC).


Q: How much Bitcoin does Satoshi Nakamoto own?
Blockchain analysts attribute approximately 1.1 million BTC across roughly 22,000 wallet addresses to Satoshi Nakamoto — worth approximately $85 billion at April 2026 prices — none of which has moved since 2010.


Q: Who owns the majority of Bitcoin?
Individual investors collectively own the majority at 65.1% of total supply, with no single party controlling more than 5%.


Q: Who owns 90% of Bitcoin?
No single entity owns 90% of Bitcoin; ownership is distributed among millions of individuals, companies, and institutions worldwide.


Q: Who controls the most Bitcoin?
No single entity controls Bitcoin's network. The largest holders — Satoshi Nakamoto, Strategy, and BlackRock's IBIT — own significant BTC amounts but have no special power over Bitcoin's protocol or transactions.


Q: Can you see who owns a Bitcoin wallet?
Bitcoin wallet addresses are pseudonymous, showing transaction history and balances but not the real-world identity of owners.


Q: Who owns Bitcoin trademark?
Bitcoin operates as an open-source project without trademark ownership; various entities hold regional trademarks for the Bitcoin name.



Conclusion

Bitcoin's ownership structure reflects its decentralized design. While Satoshi Nakamoto holds the largest individual position with an estimated 1.1 million BTC, no single entity controls the Bitcoin network itself.
Institutional adoption has accelerated significantly, with Strategy holding 818,334 BTC and BlackRock's IBIT accumulating approximately 818,000 BTC — making them the two largest institutional holders in the world. Together, just these two entities hold more Bitcoin than all the world's governments combined. Governments now hold over 400,000 BTC combined, led by the US Strategic Bitcoin Reserve of approximately 328,000 BTC.
Understanding who owns Bitcoin helps investors assess market dynamics, concentration risks, and the growing mainstream adoption of cryptocurrency as both an investment asset and potential monetary system.
  1. Want to learn more? Read our comprehensive What is Bitcoin (BTC) guide for the full picture.
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This article is provided by MEXC for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency markets involve significant risk. Please conduct independent research or consult a qualified professional before making any investment decisions. The views expressed do not necessarily represent those of MEXC or its affiliates.

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