$1,000 of Bitcoin in 2023 Would Be Worth $3,844 Today
$1,000 of bitcoin in 2023 ≈ $3,844 today
Bought at $16,547 per BTC (Jan 2023) — a 3.8× multiple (price as of 12 June 2026)
- Worth today
- $3,844
- Multiple
- 3.8×
- BTC you'd hold
- 0.0604 BTC
- BTC price, Jan 2023
- $16,547
Representative rate used — enter your actual rate below for a precise result.
The scenario
Historical Jan-1 prices (CoinGecko historical data). Current price: $63,601 (as of 12 June 2026).
Worth today
$202,551
Multiple
203×
BTC you'd hold
3.18 BTC
Versus an S&P 500 index fund
- $1,000 in bitcoin (2015)
- $202,551
- $1,000 in the S&P 500 (2015–2024, total return)
- $3,379
Hindsight is not a strategy. Bitcoin fell more than 75% from its peak on three separate occasions on the way to these numbers, and past performance says nothing about future returns. This tool is educational — it makes no predictions and is not investment advice.
How to use this calculator
- 1 Adjust the amountWe've pre-filled $1,000. Enter any hypothetical amount in US dollars.
- 2 Pick a different year2023 is selected, with bitcoin at $16,547. The dropdown shows each year's documented Jan-1 price.
- 3 Read the result$1,000 bought 0.0604 BTC in 2023, worth about $3,844 at the current price.
- 4 Check the index comparisonThe same $1,000 in an S&P 500 index fund over the same period became about $1,557 with dividends reinvested.
Compare nearby scenarios
Frequently asked questions
What would $1,000 of bitcoin bought in 2023 be worth now?
About $3,844. Bitcoin started 2023 around $16,547, so $1,000 bought roughly 0.0604 BTC — a 3.8× multiple at the current price (as of 12 June 2026, refreshed live in the calculator above).
How does that compare to the stock market?
The same $1,000 compounding in an S&P 500 index fund from 2023 through the last complete year became about $1,557 with dividends reinvested. Bitcoin's outperformance came with drawdowns exceeding 75% along the way — risk the index never approached.
Should I buy bitcoin now based on this?
This page answers a historical question only — it makes no predictions. Past returns required holding through crashes of 75% or more and say nothing about the future. If you do consider bitcoin, the standard guidance is position sizing you can afford to lose entirely and a strategy you can stick to, such as dollar-cost averaging.