Happy Birthday to the original Bitcoin Faucet — 16 years ago today.On June 11, 2010, a developer named
Gavin Andresen posted here on Bitcointalk with what he called
"something that sounds really dumb." He had built a website that gave away free Bitcoin — 5 BTC per claim. Gavin was giving away a reason to try Bitcoin.
For my first Bitcoin coding project, I decided to do something that sounds really dumb: I created a web site that gives away Bitcoins...
Five ฿ per customer, first come first served, I've stocked it with ฿1,100 to start.
Why? Because I want the Bitcoin project to succeed, and I think it is more likely to be a success if people can get a handful of coins to try it out.
To which Satoshi himself replied and said
he had planned to do this exact thingExcellent choice of a first project, nice work. I had planned to do this exact thing if someone else didn't do it, so when it gets too hard for mortals to generate 50BTC, new users could get some coins to play with right away. Donations should be able to keep it filled. The display showing the balance in the dispenser encourages people to top it up.
You should put a donation bitcoin address on the page for those who want to add funds to it, which ideally should update to a new address whenever it receives something.
That faucet is one of the earliest grassroots acts of Bitcoin adoption in history. Today, 16 years later to the day, I want to pay a small tribute to it.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━Introducing: The Satoshi Faucet
Same spirit. Same purpose. Updated for 2026.
The original dripped whole bitcoins — 5 BTC when BTC had barely any price. This one drips satoshis, the smallest unit of Bitcoin:
1 BTC = 100,000,000 satoshisIt runs on the Lightning Network. No registration, no fees, no catches.
Just connect a Lightning wallet, claim a few sats, and experience what newcomers in 2010 felt when they received their very first bitcoin.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━What this is — and what it isn'tNobody is getting rich from a few sats. That's not the goal.
The goal is to make Bitcoin tangible for someone who has never touched it. To give them a reason to set up a Lightning wallet, scan a QR code, and enjoy the free sats. The same spark of curiosity that pulled many of us in.
- No tokens
- No NFTs
- No yield farming
- No web3 buzzwords
- Just Bitcoin and sats
Lightning makes these tiny educational transactions practical again. In many ways, it brings us back to what Bitcoin felt like in the early days, when the technology itself was the point.
━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━A note on how claims workThe sending logic is intentionally kept
offline. All claims are reviewed and processed manually — no hot wallet, no automated payout pipeline exposed to the internet.
It's a deliberate design choice: this is a tribute project running on trust and sats, not a target. For the curious minds who want to poke around — I see you, and I've left a note for you here:
https://thesatoshifaucet.com/dear-hackers━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━━This project started as a side effect. I've been building a Lightning project and experimenting with the protocol, and while going down that rabbit hole I found myself reading those old historical moments of bitcoin. The faucet story kept coming back to me — how something so simple, so "dumb" by its own creator's admission, became the part of golden history of bitcoin.
So I spun up an editor, did some late-night vibe coding, and built this.
The site is intentionally simple. I tried to keep some of the look and feel of the original while giving it a modern touch.
I'd love feedback, criticism, and especially any historical details about the original faucet I might have missed.
Mostly, I hope it keeps a small piece of Bitcoin history alive.
Happy birthday to the faucet that started it all. ⚡
Thank you.