The Bitcoin balance on exchanges is a parameter that is closely monitored by the market participants. It can give a signal when a large amount of Bitcoin is moved in or out of exchanges causing the price to drop or rally. In the recent period it is also monitored as proof of reserves on exchanges.
In the last period there has been a lot of talks that Bitcoin on exchanges keeps going down due to more and more companies buying Bitcoin for their balance sheet, copying the Strategy model. Let’s take a look.
Here we will be looking at:
- Bitcoin balance on exchanges
- Historical share (%) of bitcoin balance on exchanges
- Bitcoin balance on exchanges VS supply
- Monthly Changes for BTC on exchanges
- BTC on Exchanges VS Price
- Top Exchanges holding BTC
The data is collected from sources like coinglass.com, macromicro.me, cryptoquant.com.
Bitcoin Balance on Exchanges
Here is the chart for the historical balance of bitcoin on exchanges.
This is a long-term trend starting from 2012. As we can see prior to 2013 the amount of BTC on exchanges is almost nonexistent. After 2013 there is an increase in the amount of BTC on exchanges, reaching more than 600k at the end of 2014. In 2015 there is a small drop and after that a continuous growth up to March 2020, when an ATH for BTC balance on exchanges was reached more than 3.5M.
Since 2020, the balance on bitcoin on exchanges is in constant decrease and it has dropped even more in the recent period. At the moment there are around 2.1M BTC on exchanges. Quite the drop since the ATH.
When we zoom in 2024-2025 we got this:
A continuous decline in the BTC balance on exchanges in the last years. At the beginning of 2024 there was around 2.7M, while the year ended at around 2.4M.
In 2025 there is a further drop in January, but then in the following months there was an increase of the Bitcoin supply on exchanges with the highest in April 2025. Since then the drop of the Bitcoin supply on exchanges has continued and these days we are at new record lows.
Note that different source are reporting different data on the Bitcoin balance on exchanges and the current 2.1M might differ.
Bitcoin on Exchanges VS Supply
When we plot the balance on exchanges VS the overall supply, we get this:
We can notice the increase in the balance one exchanges up to 2020 here as well, and then a slow decrease. But still overall we can see how small this share is from the absolute supply when presented in the chart above.
Historical Share [%] of Bitcoin Balance on Exchanges
When we take a look at the Bitcoin balance in relative terms, as percent of the supply we get this:
This chart is similar to the absolute balance, but here we can see the share [%]. An all-time high of 20%, in 2020, and a drop since then to 11% where we are now. At the beginning of 2024 this percent was close to 14%.
When presented as a pie chart the chart looks like this:
A 11% of the Bitcoin supply is currently on exchanges. This is a low amount of tokens on exchanges, especially bearing in mind that Bitcoin doesn’t have any type of staking rewards or similar incentives for users to withdraw their tokens of exchanges. The overall trend of self-custody has been growing.
Monthly Changes for BTC on Exchanges
The change for the monthly balance on exchanges is as follows:
This is a chart for the period starting from 2024 till now. A positive bar is the inflow, negative outflow from exchanges.
We can see that last year in 2024 most of the months were negative with November been the month with the most BTC withdrawn from exchanges.
In 2025 January started with strong amount of BTC withdrawals, but then February was slightly in the positive, while March and April had the biggest inflow on exchanges in this two years period. At this time the tariff war was happening and the Bitcoin price dropped to sub 80k. Since then all the months are in the negative.
Bitcoin Balance on Exchanges VS Price
When we plot the BTC balance on exchanges vs the price we get this:
When we look at the long-term trend, we can notice that there has been a correlation back in 2017, when the price increased, that followed by a large amounts of BTC deposited on exchange, and this continued to grow even during the bear market of 2018 and 2019.
In the last bull market of 2021, there hasn’t been any significant increase in BTC on exchanges. There was only a slight increase towards the end of 2021, but then the trend for removing BTC from exchanges continued, no matter the price.
Will this trend be over soon, or it will continue in the future remains to be seen.
In the last years these two have been moving in the opposite direction. The amount of BTC on exchanges down, and the price up.
Top Exchanges Holding BTC
Which exchange holds the most BTC. Here is the chart.
The Coinbase Pro with close to 650k BTC is on the top here according to Coinglass. Not sure what is included in this amount, does Bitcoin that Coinbase custody for other entities, like maybe the ETFs. In the past this number was close to 900k.
Binance is in the second spot with close to 630k Bitcoins, followed by Bitfinex. These three hold the most Bitcoin of all the exchanges, after them there is a significant drop in the amount of Bitcoin the next exchanges on the list hold.
Obviously, there was some moves in the amount of BTC on exchanges in 2025. An increase in April and then a drop afterwards. As less and less Bitcoin remains on exchanges, the possibility of supply shock increases.
All the best
@dalz
It looks more companies are choosing to keep Bitcoin instead of trading it, which might create some cool changes in the market.
The steady flow of Bitcoin from exchanges indicates growing confidence in self custody but also points to an impending supply crunch that could spark the next major price surge.
hmmmm. BTC is on the move. UP UP UP!
I think more crypto users are opting to keep their BTC in wallets, instead of exchanges. Keeping on exchanges is kinda risky, except if the person is engaging in leveraged trading. But as the price of BTC goes up, more BTC will flow to exchanges as people will look to sell and take profit.
Interesting trend! It’s a good sign that more people are moving their Bitcoin off exchanges. Less supply usually means stronger prices ahead if demand keeps growing.