r/Bitcoin peaks Wednesdays 6am-8am UTC
r/Bitcoin was created on September 09, 2010, making it 15 years and 6 months old and one of the earliest subreddits on Reddit. With 8,095,645 members, this is a large and well-established subreddit with significant reach and influence on Reddit.
r/Bitcoin is steadily growing, with 23,503 new members in the last 30 days.
r/Bitcoin functions as a primary informational hub for the Bitcoin ecosystem, characterized by a technical and policy-focused atmosphere distinct from more speculative cryptocurrency communities. Founded in 2009, it has grown into one of the largest and longest-standing cryptocurrency subreddits, reflecting its role as a central reference point for the original cryptocurrency. The community generally maintains a serious, solution-oriented tone, emphasizing Bitcoin's foundational principles of decentralization, security, and censorship resistance. Moderation typically enforces strict rules against price speculation, low-effort memes, and off-topic cryptocurrency promotion, fostering discussions centered on protocol development, economic implications, security research, and adoption challenges. This focus creates an environment prioritizing substantive dialogue over market hype, aligning with Bitcoin's underlying philosophy of a trust-minimized monetary system.
Content within r/Bitcoin predominantly features technical analyses, academic research, developer updates, regulatory news, and deep dives into Bitcoin's economic properties. Common post types include discussions on protocol improvements (like past soft forks), security advisories, educational explainers for new users, critiques of competing projects, and debates on monetary policy implications. The identified peak activity on Tuesday evenings UTC suggests significant engagement from a global user base, likely coordinating with major market updates or developer community rhythms. While the average engagement metrics indicate consistent but not viral interaction per post, the volume and nature of comments often reflect detailed technical exchanges and reasoned debate, supporting the subreddit's reputation as a place for informed discourse rather than fleeting trends. The moderate comment-to-upvote ratio points towards focused discussion quality over sheer volume.
What distinguishes r/Bitcoin is its historical significance, unwavering adherence to Bitcoin-specific topics, and its role as a relatively stable forum amidst the volatile cryptocurrency landscape. Unlike broader crypto communities, it avoids altcoin discussions and short-term price predictions, maintaining a long-term perspective on Bitcoin's evolution as "sound money." This makes it particularly valuable for developers, researchers, economists, long-term investors ("HODLers"), and individuals seeking a technically grounded understanding of Bitcoin's protocol and monetary theory. Those interested in the foundational technology, monetary policy debates, or serious investment analysis based on first principles would find the subreddit most beneficial, while traders seeking immediate market signals or enthusiasts of other cryptocurrencies are typically directed to more specialized forums. Its enduring presence underscores its position as a cornerstone community for Bitcoin purists and serious adopters.
r/Bitcoin shows typical engagement for a community of this scale, with an average of 142.8 upvotes per post across its 8,095,645 members. The community is primarily content-consumption focused, with a comment-to-upvote ratio of 0.2. To reach the Hot section of r/Bitcoin, posts typically need at least 5 upvotes, reflecting the community's activity level.
Posts on r/Bitcoin receive an average of 29.0 comments, indicating a community that primarily engages through upvoting content. Posts tend to be appreciated more through voting than through discussion in the comments.
Based on an analysis of 100 top posts from the past week, Wednesday is the most active day with 25 posts reaching the top, while Sunday sees the least activity with 9 posts. Weekday activity is higher than weekends, suggesting a more professionally-oriented community.
The peak posting hours are around 6am UTC (10 posts), 7pm UTC (8 posts), and 3pm UTC (8 posts). The quietest hours are 7am UTC, 3am UTC, and 8am UTC, with only 1-1 posts each reaching the top during these times.
Weekly breakdown: Monday (17), Tuesday (16), Wednesday (25), Thursday (11), Friday (12), Saturday (10), Sunday (9) posts reaching the top.
r/Bitcoin currently has 8,095,645 subscribers. Over the past 30 days, the community has grown by 23,503 members (0.29%), averaging 691 new subscribers per day. This growth rate places r/Bitcoin in the top 35% of all tracked subreddits.
Over the past 90 days, r/Bitcoin has gained 64,574 subscribers (0.8%). Since tracking began 575 days ago, the community has added 1,205,595 total subscribers.
r/Bitcoin is steadily growing, with 23,503 new members in the last 30 days.
r/Bitcoin has 8,095,645 subscribers as of March 2026.
The best time to post on r/Bitcoin is Wednesdays 6am-8am UTC, based on analysis of top-performing posts from the past week.
r/Bitcoin is steadily growing, with 23,503 new members in the last 30 days.
r/Bitcoin was created on September 09, 2010, making it 15 years old.
Posts on r/Bitcoin typically need at least 5 upvotes to reach the Hot section.
r/Bitcoin is a Reddit community with 8,095,645 subscribers. The community describes itself as: "Bitcoin is the currency of the Internet: a distributed, worldwide, decentralized digital money. Unlike traditional currencies such as dollars, bitcoins are issued and managed without any central..." The best time to post on r/Bitcoin is Wednesdays 6am-8am UTC. Posts receive an average of 142.8 upvotes and 29.0 comments. The minimum upvotes needed to reach the Hot section is approximately 5. The subreddit is adding approximately 691 new members each day. Founded 15 years ago, r/Bitcoin is tracked and analyzed by RedditList as part of its comprehensive database of over 106,347 subreddits.
Last updated: 2026-03-07 02:51:32