Bitcoin has no CEO, no headquarters, no gold in a vault. So why is it worth over €75,000? The answer involves a mental shift that most people never make.
In 1628, the Dutch were using seashells as money in parts of West Africa. Not because seashells were inherently useful — you cannot eat them, build with them, or wear them — but because everyone agreed they had value. That agreement was the only thing that made them work.
Four hundred years later, people ask the same question about Bitcoin: what gives Bitcoin value? It has no physical form. No government backing. No CEO. No headquarters. And yet, one Bitcoin is worth over €75,000 as of early 2026.
The answer requires rethinking something most people take for granted — what “value” actually means.
This is the mental shift that changes everything. People assume gold is valuable because it is gold. But that is circular reasoning. Gold is a soft, heavy metal with some industrial uses — but those uses account for less than 10% of its demand. The other 90%? People want gold because other people want gold.
The same applies to a €50 note. The paper and ink cost about €0.10 to produce. Its value comes entirely from an agreement — millions of people trust that the European Central Bank will honour it. Remove that trust, and it becomes a colourful piece of paper.
Value is not a property of objects. It is a property of networks. The more people who agree something has value, the more valuable it becomes. This is true for seashells, gold, euros, and Bitcoin.
If value comes from agreement, what makes Bitcoin’s agreement strong enough to support a trillion-dollar market? Several properties — and each one was deliberately designed.
There will only ever be 21 million Bitcoin. Not approximately — exactly. This cap is written into Bitcoin’s code and enforced by hundreds of thousands of computers worldwide. No president, no central bank, no corporation can create more.
Compare this to every other form of money in existence:
When something cannot be created at will, and demand for it increases, the price must rise. This is not speculation — it is mathematics.
Bitcoin has no single point of control. No company runs it. No government issued it. It operates on a network of computers spread across every continent, and no single entity can shut it down, censor a transaction, or change the rules without near-universal agreement.
Why does this matter? Because every other form of money depends on trusting an institution. You trust your bank will not freeze your account. You trust your government will not inflate your currency into worthlessness. For billions of people around the world — from Argentina to Turkey to Nigeria — that trust has been broken, repeatedly.
Bitcoin offers something no other monetary system does: rules without rulers. The protocol enforces the rules. No human can override them.
A telephone is useless if you are the only person who owns one. But when millions of people have telephones, the network becomes incredibly valuable — not because the phones changed, but because the number of possible connections exploded.
Bitcoin works the same way. In 2010, a few thousand people used it. Today, over 500 million people worldwide hold or have used Bitcoin. Every new user, every new business that accepts it, every institution that invests in it makes the network more valuable for everyone already in it.
This is a self-reinforcing cycle. More users attract more developers, who build better tools, which attract more users. Bitcoin’s network effect is now so large that it would be extraordinarily difficult for any competitor to replicate it.
Bitcoin is secured by a process called mining, where powerful computers compete to validate transactions and add them to the blockchain. This process consumes real energy — and that is the point.
The energy expenditure is not a flaw. It is a feature. To attack or manipulate the Bitcoin network, you would need to control more computing power than the rest of the network combined. As of 2026, that would require more electricity than most countries consume and hardware worth billions of euros. It is, for all practical purposes, impossible.
This makes Bitcoin the most secure computer network ever created. Your €100 in a bank is protected by a company. Your Bitcoin is protected by physics.
This question comes up constantly, and the honest answer depends on how you define money. Economists generally agree that money needs three properties:
Bitcoin today is strongest as a store of value — digital gold, if you like. It is becoming a medium of exchange. It is not yet a unit of account. But gold was not a practical medium of exchange either, and nobody questions whether gold is “real money.”
Forget the technical properties for a moment. The most powerful case for why Bitcoin is valuable is simply this: it has survived everything.
Seventeen years of relentless stress-testing, and it has never been successfully attacked, never gone offline, and never failed to process a valid transaction. No financial system in history — not banks, not gold markets, not stock exchanges — can make that claim.
That resilience is not luck. It is the result of a design so robust that even its enemies cannot break it. And that resilience, perhaps more than any other single factor, is what gives Bitcoin value.
You do not need to understand the technical details of mining or blockchain to appreciate what Bitcoin offers. The core idea is simple:
For the first time in human history, there is a form of money that cannot be inflated, cannot be seized, cannot be censored, and cannot be stopped. Whether that is worth €75,000 or €750,000 per coin is something the market will decide over time. But the properties that make it valuable are not going away.
Buying your first Bitcoin does not require understanding all of this. Platforms like Blockforia make the process as simple as any online purchase — you can own Bitcoin in minutes, starting with any amount that feels comfortable.
But understanding why it has value? That is what separates people who panic during price drops from people who see them as opportunities.
Bitcoin is not valuable because the price is high. The price is high because Bitcoin is valuable. And now you know why.