The actual circulating supply of bitcoin is far below its set upper limit of 21 million coins. According to analysis, due to forgotten private keys or hardware damage, about 2.3 million to 7.8 million bitcoins have been permanently lost. This "silent deflation" far exceeds the total holdings of all institutions. Satoshi Nakamoto's prophecy is coming true: these lost coins are essentially a donation to all holders, making the remaining bitcoin even rarer and more valuable.
Written by: Long Yue
Source: Wallstreetcn
The supply cap of bitcoin is 21 million coins, but the actual number available for circulation may be far lower than this.
Recently, according to data tracked by "Sound Money Report", estimates from multiple on-chain analysis reports show that due to reasons such as forgotten private keys, hard drive damage, or accidental death of owners, between 2.3 million and 7.8 million bitcoins may have permanently exited circulation. This means that out of the current circulating supply of about 19.9 million coins, the effective number may be as low as 12.1 to 17.6 million coins.
In April 2010, bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto predicted on the BitcoinTalk forum: "Lost bitcoins only make everyone else's coins worth slightly more. Think of it as a donation to everyone." Now, this comment from more than a decade ago is becoming reality on an unprecedented scale.
Unlike traditional assets such as stocks or bonds, there is no "report loss and reissue" in the world of bitcoin. The famous saying in the crypto world, "Not your keys, not your coins," often turns into a harsher reality: "No keys, no coins."
Once the private key—a unique 256-bit password—is lost, the corresponding bitcoin becomes a "ghost asset" visible on the blockchain but forever inaccessible. Such cases are not uncommon, for example:
According to data compiled by Sound Money Report from multiple sources, the estimated range of permanently lost bitcoins is between 2.3 million and 7.8 million coins.
Although there are differences in statistical methods, these data all point to one fact: there is a large and ever-growing pool of permanently lost bitcoins.
This "invisible supply shock" caused by lost bitcoins is much larger in scale than the much-discussed institutional adoption.
As of August 2025, data shows that all spot bitcoin ETFs combined hold about 1.036 million bitcoins. According to statistics from the Bitcoin Treasuries website, the total holdings of the top 100 publicly listed companies worldwide amount to about 988,000 bitcoins, with some well-known companies holding a portion of bitcoin. Adding up the bitcoins held by ETFs and corporations, the total is about 2.2 million.
This means that even with the most conservative estimate of 2.3 million lost coins, the number of bitcoins permanently out of circulation already exceeds the total held by Wall Street and global corporate giants.
While the market's focus remains on how much capital BlackRock's IBIT fund has attracted or how much more bitcoin MicroStrategy has acquired, a much larger and more far-reaching supply squeeze is quietly taking place.
Based on the current 19.9 million mined bitcoins, subtracting a median estimate of 5 million lost bitcoins, then subtracting the 2.2 million held by institutions, and assuming that long-term individual investors "hoard" about 3.8 million, the actual freely circulating supply of bitcoin available for trading in the market may be only 8.9 million coins, accounting for about 45% of the total mined. In comparison, the free float ratio of S&P 500 constituent stocks is usually between 70%-90%.
Therefore, the current media-reported total bitcoin market cap of over $2.1 trillion actually contains an "illusion." If 5 million "ghost bitcoins" are excluded, its real market cap should be about $1.6 trillion, with about $500 billion evaporating out of thin air.
In summary, the scarcity of bitcoin far exceeds its nominal cap of 21 million coins. This "silent deflation" caused by loss, forgetfulness, and death is continuously reducing the actual supply of bitcoin, with an impact and scale far beyond the scope of mainstream financial media attention.
The market is gradually realizing that it is "scarcer than imagined."