The question these days is whether people actually use bitcoin or cryptocurrency for payments or only use them as investment asset? The answer is that yes there are people who use bitcoin/cryptocurrency for payment but the number has decreased over the years. But what really piqued my interest is the demographic of who use cryptocurrency more for payments in the US.
Racial or ethnic minority consumers, especially Black (non-Hispanic) and Hispanic consumers, were more likely to use cryptocurrency for payments than white (non-Hispanic) consumers in both 2022 and 2024, though the shares of consumers who pay with cryptocurrency declined across all three groups.
You can have more information from this report by Pew Research.
Pew Research on American cryptocurrency investors.Bitcoin with 5- or 6-figure price has become more expensive and it makes Bitcoin becomes more like an investment asset, a store of value, than a daily payment mean. There are people who use bitcoins for payments but not all Bitcoin owners consider payment as their main interest of why they purchased and hold bitcoins on exchanges or in their non custodial wallets.
The share of adults who have heard about NFTs also varies by race, ethnicity and income. Asian Americans, for example, are the most likely among racial and ethnic groups studied to say they have heard at least a little about NFTs (66%). That compares with about half of White or Hispanic adults (49% and 48%, respectively) and 38% of Black adults. Similarly, Americans with relatively higher incomes are most likely to have heard about NFTs: About two-thirds (66%) have heard at least a little, followed by roughly half of Americans in the middle income range (51%) and about a third (36%) of those with lower incomes. Small shares of all those groups have actually bought NFTs.