Bitcoin's supply is capped at 21 million, but the actual number in circulation is likely far less. Recently, according to data from the Sound Money Report, multiple on-chain analysis reports estimate that between 2.3 million and 7.8 million bitcoins may have been permanently removed from circulation due to factors such as forgotten private keys, hard drive damage, and the owner's unexpected death. This means that the current circulating supply of approximately 19.9 million bitcoins could be as low as 12.1 to 17.6 million. In April 2010, Bitcoin's creator, Satoshi Nakamoto, predicted on the BitcoinTalk forum: "Lost bitcoins only make others' coins a little more valuable. Think of it as a donation to everyone." Today, this comment, made over a decade ago, is becoming reality on an unprecedented scale. Irretrievable Digital Wealth Unlike traditional assets like stocks and bonds, there's no "lost and lost" replacement in the world of Bitcoin. The crypto-world motto, "Not your keys, not your coins," often translates to the even more brutal "No keys, no coins" in reality. Once a private key—that unique 256-bit password—is lost, the corresponding bitcoins become "ghost assets" on the blockchain, visible but inaccessible. Such cases are common, for example: In 2013, Welsh IT engineer James Howells reportedly accidentally discarded a hard drive containing the private keys for 8,000 bitcoins, an asset now valued at nearly $900 million. Former Ripple CTO Stefan Thomas forgot the password to an encrypted hard drive containing 7,002 bitcoins and fell into endless despair when he only had two attempts left out of 10. There are even cases of people losing vast fortunes through unexpected deaths. Gerald Cotten, CEO of the Canadian cryptocurrency exchange QuadrigaCX, reportedly passed away in 2018, leaving $190 million worth of customer funds (including a large amount of bitcoin) inaccessible. According to data compiled by Sound Money Report from various sources, estimates of these permanently lost bitcoins range from 2.3 million to 7.8 million.
In a May 2025 report, Ledger cited analysts’ estimates that the number of lost coins was between 2.3 million and 3.7 million, accounting for about 11%-18% of the total.
In a June 2025 report, Cairn Island digital analyst Timothy Peterson estimated that more than 6 million BTC were irrecoverable. A 2023 study by blockchain analytics platform Glassnode and ARK Invest estimated that approximately 7.8 million BTC are hoarded or lost, though this figure may be higher due to the inclusion of long-term "hoarding" addresses. This represents approximately 39% of the total supply (as of September 8, 2025, approximately 19.9 million Bitcoins have been mined). Despite differences in statistical caliber, these figures collectively point to a large and growing pool of impermanently lost Bitcoin. The Hidden "Supply Shock": Underestimated Scarcity This "hidden supply shock" caused by lost Bitcoin is far larger than the much-discussed institutional adoption. As of August 2025, data shows that all spot Bitcoin ETFs hold a combined total of approximately 1.036 million Bitcoins. According to statistics from the Bitcoin Treasuries website, the top 100 publicly traded companies globally hold approximately 988,000 Bitcoins, with some well-known companies also holding some. Adding together the Bitcoin held by ETFs and companies, the total is approximately 2.2 million. This means that even using the most conservative estimate of 2.3 million lost Bitcoins, the number of Bitcoins permanently removed from circulation already exceeds the combined holdings of Wall Street and global corporate giants. While the market's focus remains on inflows into BlackRock's IBIT fund or the increased Bitcoin holdings by MicroStrategy, a more significant and far-reaching supply crunch is quietly underway. Bitcoin's true market capitalization may be overestimated by approximately $500 billion. Taking the currently mined 19.9 million Bitcoins as a base, subtracting a median estimate of 5 million lost Bitcoins, subtracting the 2.2 million held by institutions, and assuming that individual long-term investors have "hoarded" approximately 3.8 million Bitcoins, the actual free float of Bitcoin available for trading in the market may be only 8.9 million, or approximately 45% of the total mined supply. By comparison, the free float ratio of S&P 500 stocks typically ranges between 70% and 90%. Therefore, the current media report of Bitcoin's total market capitalization exceeding $2.1 trillion is actually an illusion. If we exclude the 5 million "ghost bitcoins," the true market capitalization would be approximately $1.6 trillion, a loss of approximately $500 billion. In short, Bitcoin's scarcity far exceeds its stated limit of 21 million coins. This "silent deflation" of loss, oblivion, and death is continuously reducing the actual supply of Bitcoin, and its impact and scale far exceed the current focus of mainstream financial media. The market is gradually realizing that this is "scarcer than imagined."