
A House's Price in Bitcoin Has Fallen 90% Since 2020
A typical US house has gained more than $100,000 in value since 2020, according to Fidelity Digital Assets. But price that same property in bitcoin, and the picture flips: it's fallen from more than 50 BTC in 2020 to roughly 5 BTC today — a 90% drop over five years, CoinDesk reports.
Fidelity analyst Zack Wainwright frames it this way: "What appears to be appreciation in housing is more accurately a reflection of an erosion of fiat currency." In other words, the house itself didn't become a more valuable asset — the yardstick used to measure it, the dollar, lost value.
Context: US inflation has stayed above the Fed's 2% target for more than five years straight, and bitcoin itself has actually halved in price to $63,000 since October 2025 despite this comparison — meaning the math holds up even during a weak stretch for BTC, not at a cycle peak.
Against that backdrop, BlackRock reported more than $200 million in inflows into its IBIT bitcoin fund over the past week, while the real yield on 10-year Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) climbed to 2.30% — the highest since January 2025.
The upshot: bitcoin advocates use comparisons like this as an argument for an asset with a fixed 21-million-coin supply — their logic being that it reflects real purchasing power more honestly than a nominal price denominated in a currency that keeps getting printed. That doesn't erase bitcoin's own volatility — it's just a different frame for the same question.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

Author
Mike RobinsonNews feed editor
I'm constantly writing about crypto, Bitcoin, and altcoins. I cover a variety of topics related to the virtual currency market.
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