Bitcoin Calculator

Convert between Bitcoin and USD. Calculate the value of your BTC holdings and convert to various Bitcoin units.

Bitcoin Conversion

$

Current BTC market price

Convert

BTC
$

1.00000000 BTC

$45,000

at $45,000 per BTC

🔸Satoshis
100,000,000
📊mBTC
1000.00000
💎Bits (μBTC)
1000000.00
💵Sats per Dollar
2,222

Bitcoin Unit Reference

1 BTC$45,000
1 mBTC$45,000
1 bits$45,000
1 satoshis$45,000

Bitcoin Units

  • 1 BTC = 1,000 mBTC (milliBitcoin)
  • 1 BTC = 1,000,000 bits (microBitcoin)
  • 1 BTC = 100,000,000 satoshis

Understanding Bitcoin

Bitcoin (BTC) is the first and largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization, created in 2009 by the pseudonymous Satoshi Nakamoto. It operates on a decentralized peer-to-peer network.

PropertyValueSignificance
Max Supply21 million BTCFixed supply creates scarcity
Block Time~10 minutesNew block added every 10 min average
Block Reward (2024+)3.125 BTCHalves every ~4 years
Current Circulating~19.6 million BTC93% already mined
Smallest Unit1 Satoshi (0.00000001 BTC)100 million sats = 1 BTC
ConsensusProof of Work (PoW)Secured by mining

Bitcoin Units and Denominations

Bitcoin can be divided into smaller units for transactions of any size:

UnitSymbolBTC ValueSatoshi ValueCommon Use
BitcoinBTC/₿1100,000,000Large transactions
MillibitcoinmBTC0.001100,000Medium transactions
Bit (Microbitcoin)μBTC/bits0.000001100Small payments
Satoshisat/sats0.000000011Lightning Network, stacking

The Satoshi is named after Bitcoin's creator. With Bitcoin at $50,000, 1 sat = $0.0005.

Bitcoin Units

1 BTC = 1,000 mBTC (millibitcoin) 1 BTC = 1,000,000 μBTC (microbitcoin/bits) 1 BTC = 100,000,000 satoshis (sats)

Where:

  • BTC= Bitcoin (base unit)
  • sat= Satoshi (smallest unit)

Bitcoin Conversion Formulas

Essential formulas for Bitcoin calculations:

CalculationFormulaExampleResult
BTC to FiatBTC × Price0.5 BTC × $50,000$25,000
Fiat to BTCFiat ÷ Price$1,000 ÷ $50,0000.02 BTC
BTC to SatoshisBTC × 100,000,0000.005 × 100,000,000500,000 sats
Satoshis to BTCSats ÷ 100,000,000250,000 ÷ 100,000,0000.0025 BTC
Sats per Dollar100,000,000 ÷ BTC Price100,000,000 ÷ $50,0002,000 sats/$
Dollar per SatBTC Price ÷ 100,000,000$50,000 ÷ 100,000,000$0.0005/sat

Bitcoin Profit and Loss Calculation

Calculate your Bitcoin investment returns:

MetricFormulaExample
Absolute Gain/Loss(Current Price - Buy Price) × BTC Amount($60,000 - $40,000) × 0.5 = $10,000
Percentage Return((Current - Buy) ÷ Buy) × 100(($60,000 - $40,000) ÷ $40,000) × 100 = 50%
Average Cost (DCA)Total Invested ÷ Total BTC$5,000 ÷ 0.12 BTC = $41,667/BTC
Break-even PriceTotal Cost (incl. fees) ÷ BTC Amount$5,100 ÷ 0.12 = $42,500
HODL ROICurrent Value ÷ Total Invested - 1($7,200 ÷ $5,000) - 1 = 44%

Bitcoin Halving Schedule

Bitcoin's block reward halves approximately every 4 years (210,000 blocks):

HalvingDateBlock RewardCumulative MinedPrice Impact
GenesisJan 200950 BTC0%$0
1st HalvingNov 201225 BTC50%$12 → $1,100 (1 year later)
2nd HalvingJul 201612.5 BTC75%$650 → $19,000 (1.5 years later)
3rd HalvingMay 20206.25 BTC87.5%$9,000 → $69,000 (1.5 years later)
4th HalvingApr 20243.125 BTC93.75%TBD
5th Halving~20281.5625 BTC96.875%Future

The last Bitcoin will be mined around 2140. After that, miners earn only transaction fees.

Bitcoin Transaction Fees

Bitcoin fees depend on transaction size (in bytes) and network congestion:

PriorityFee Rate (sat/vB)Typical FeeConfirmation Time
Economy5-15 sat/vB$1-31+ hours
Standard20-50 sat/vB$3-1030-60 minutes
Priority50-100 sat/vB$10-2510-30 minutes
Urgent100+ sat/vB$25+Next block (~10 min)
Transaction TypeTypical SizeFee at 50 sat/vB
Simple (1 input, 2 outputs)~225 vB11,250 sats (~$5)
Medium (2-3 inputs)~400 vB20,000 sats (~$10)
Complex (many inputs)~800 vB40,000 sats (~$20)
Lightning Channel Open~200 vB10,000 sats (~$5)

Bitcoin Investment Strategies

Common approaches to investing in Bitcoin:

StrategyDescriptionRisk LevelBest For
HODLBuy and hold long-term (4+ years)MediumLong-term believers
DCA (Dollar-Cost Averaging)Regular purchases regardless of priceLow-MediumMost investors
Lump SumInvest entire amount at onceHighThose with conviction
Stacking SatsAccumulate small amounts continuouslyLowBeginners
TradingBuy low, sell high (timing market)Very HighExperienced traders
Value AveragingAdjust purchases to meet target growthMediumDisciplined investors

Worked Examples

Convert USD to Bitcoin

Problem:

You want to invest $5,000 when Bitcoin is priced at $52,000. How much BTC will you receive?

Solution Steps:

  1. 1Use the formula: BTC = USD ÷ Price
  2. 2BTC = $5,000 ÷ $52,000
  3. 3BTC = 0.09615385
  4. 4In satoshis: 0.09615385 × 100,000,000 = 9,615,385 sats

Result:

You'll receive approximately 0.0962 BTC (9,615,385 satoshis)

Calculate Investment Profit

Problem:

You bought 0.25 BTC at $30,000 and the price is now $55,000. What's your profit?

Solution Steps:

  1. 1Initial investment: 0.25 × $30,000 = $7,500
  2. 2Current value: 0.25 × $55,000 = $13,750
  3. 3Profit: $13,750 - $7,500 = $6,250
  4. 4Percentage return: ($6,250 ÷ $7,500) × 100 = 83.33%

Result:

Your profit is $6,250 (83.33% return)

DCA Average Cost Calculation

Problem:

Over 6 months, you bought: $500 at $40K, $500 at $45K, $500 at $35K, $500 at $50K, $500 at $42K, $500 at $48K. What's your average cost?

Solution Steps:

  1. 1BTC purchased each month: $500/$40K = 0.0125, $500/$45K = 0.0111, $500/$35K = 0.0143, etc.
  2. 2Total BTC: 0.0125 + 0.0111 + 0.0143 + 0.01 + 0.0119 + 0.0104 = 0.0702 BTC
  3. 3Total invested: $500 × 6 = $3,000
  4. 4Average cost: $3,000 ÷ 0.0702 = $42,735 per BTC

Result:

Your DCA average cost is $42,735 per BTC—better than lump sum at $48K or $50K

Tips & Best Practices

  • Use satoshis for smaller amounts—'0.00042 BTC' is easier to understand as '42,000 sats'
  • Dollar-cost averaging (DCA) helps reduce the impact of Bitcoin's volatility on your purchase price
  • Always account for transaction fees when calculating profits—they can be significant during high congestion
  • Check mempool.space or similar fee estimators before making transactions to avoid overpaying
  • Consider the tax implications of selling—in most jurisdictions, Bitcoin gains are taxable events
  • For long-term holding, use a hardware wallet and secure your seed phrase in multiple physical locations
  • Remember: not your keys, not your coins—exchange holdings are not truly yours until withdrawn

Frequently Asked Questions

A Satoshi (sat) is the smallest unit of Bitcoin, equal to 0.00000001 BTC (one hundred-millionth). Named after Bitcoin's creator, it enables microtransactions and makes Bitcoin accessible at any price. If Bitcoin reaches $1 million, 1 sat would equal $0.01. Many Lightning Network transactions use sats as the standard unit. 'Stacking sats' has become a popular term for accumulating small amounts of Bitcoin over time.
Historically, Bitcoin halvings have preceded significant price increases. The halving reduces new supply by 50%, creating supply shock while demand continues. However, past performance doesn't guarantee future results. The 2012 halving saw 9,000% gains, 2016 saw 2,900%, and 2020 saw 700%. Each cycle shows diminishing percentage returns as Bitcoin's market cap grows. The 2024 halving reduced block rewards from 6.25 to 3.125 BTC.
For beginners: 1) Use established exchanges like Coinbase, Kraken, or Gemini for regulatory compliance and insurance, 2) Start with dollar-cost averaging (DCA)—buy small fixed amounts weekly or monthly, 3) Only invest what you can afford to lose, 4) Move coins to a personal wallet for security (hardware wallet for larger amounts), 5) Never share your seed phrase. Avoid trading and leverage until you understand the market well.
Bitcoin fees are based on transaction size in virtual bytes (vB), not value transferred. A transaction's size depends on number of inputs (coins being spent) and outputs (recipients). Fee = Size (vB) × Fee Rate (sat/vB). During high congestion, users bid higher fees for faster confirmation. Use mempool.space to check current fee rates. Tips to reduce fees: consolidate UTXOs during low-fee periods, use SegWit addresses, and batch transactions.
Historically, lump sum beats DCA about 66% of the time because markets tend to go up. However, Bitcoin's extreme volatility makes DCA psychologically easier and reduces the risk of buying at a local top. DCA benefits: removes emotion, builds discipline, averages out volatility. Lump sum benefits: potentially higher returns, immediate full exposure. A hybrid approach—invest 50% immediately, DCA the rest—combines both strategies.
Bitcoin's price is determined by supply and demand on exchanges. Key factors: 1) Fixed supply (21M cap) creates scarcity, 2) Halving events reduce new supply, 3) Institutional adoption (ETFs, corporate treasuries), 4) Regulatory news and government policies, 5) Macroeconomic conditions (inflation, interest rates), 6) Network effects and adoption metrics, 7) Mining costs set a price floor. Unlike stocks, Bitcoin has no earnings—value is derived from utility, scarcity, and collective belief.

Sources & References

Last updated: 2026-01-22