Mcap -- BTC -- ETH -- SOL -- BNB -- XRP -- F&G -- View Market
Loading prices…

Crypto converter

From
β€”
To
β€”

β€” in Major Fiats

Live rates for the coin above against the ten most traded global currencies.

Loading rates…

How much Bitcoin does 10000 USD buy at the live market rate? The converter at the top of this page shows the current answer, refreshed every sixty seconds against CoinGecko’s aggregated spot price. The short editorial below covers what that number actually means.

How the rate is calculated

The converter uses CoinGecko’s aggregated USD/BTC price, which is a volume-weighted blend of the bid-ask midpoint across the hundreds of exchanges CoinGecko tracks. That’s the same number most financial news tickers quote when they reference the price. It’s a mid-market rate, not an executable quote; when you actually trade, you pay the exchange’s fee and a small spread on top.

Why the number on your exchange is slightly different

Aggregators (CoinGecko, CoinMarketCap, CryptoCompare) agree to within a few tenths of a percent at any given moment, and every major spot exchange quotes a price within that same band. Small divergences come from geographic latency, thinner order books on specific fiat pairs, and the exchange’s fee structure. For a live trade, your exchange’s quoted price is what you actually get, minus fees. For planning, tax filing, or curiosity, the aggregate rate here is fine.

What 10000 USD in Bitcoin actually looks like

A 10000 USD Bitcoin position is a retail-scale starting amount. Enough to see meaningful exposure to Bitcoin’s price moves, small enough that a 50% drawdown is a learning experience rather than a life event. Most first-time Bitcoin buyers land somewhere in the $50-$500 range and scale up once they understand the workflow. See the how to buy Bitcoin guide for the full mechanics.

For other amounts or currency pairs, use the main converter at /convert/. Or jump straight to common landing pages: 1 BTC to USD, 1 ETH to USD, 100 USD to BTC, 1000 USD to BTC.