Somewhere around March 15, 2026, a miner will cross one of the most significant thresholds in monetary history. The 20 millionth Bitcoin will be mined.
No press conference. No ceremony. Just a block, a hash, and a number ticking over on a protocol that has been running without interruption since January 3, 2009.
Here are the numbers that most people are glossing over:
- 95.24% of all Bitcoin that will EVER exist already exists
- Only 1 million BTC remain to be mined
- Those final 1 million will take 114 YEARS to distribute
- The last Bitcoin won't be mined until approximately 2140
- An estimated 2.3M - 3.7M BTC are already permanently lost
So the real circulating supply isn't even 20 million. It's closer to 16-17 million — and that number only goes down as more coins are lost to time.
Think about that for a second. The asset people are panic selling at $63K right now has a real circulating supply smaller than the population of the Netherlands.
**The part nobody talks about — the fee transition**
We are entering the final chapter of Bitcoin's subsidy era. Miners currently earn 3.125 BTC per block. After 2028 that drops to 1.5625. The subsidy becomes an increasingly irrelevant portion of miner revenue with each cycle.
On high volume days in 2025, fees already accounted for 30-60% of miner revenue. The network is already transitioning whether people acknowledge it or not.
**What this milestone actually means**
The supply schedule has never changed. Not once. Not by a single satoshi. While every other monetary system in history has been debased, inflated, or manipulated — this protocol has issued new coins exactly as programmed for 17 years straight.
On March 15 the world gets another reminder of that fact.
Curious what this forum thinks — is the fee transition a genuine long term concern for network security, or is this a solved problem that gets overstated by bears?
Full breakdown here if anyone wants the detailed analysis: 👉
https://dailycoinpost.com/20-millionth-bitcoin-mined-what-it-means