Approximately $8.5 million worth of 107 BTC has been sent to an unspendable address on the blockchain by an unknown individual or institution. This means the assets have now been fully removed from circulation, effectively lost forever.
Long-dormant bitcoins destroyed after 12 years
Galaxy Research reported that these funds originated from five different Bitcoin wallets. On-chain data shows the BTC had been dormant for nearly twelve years, barely moving during that time. Purchased when Bitcoin was trading at under $600, these coins have surged more than 12,700% in value by the time of this transfer.
Analysts highlight that the market closely monitors major movements of balances that have remained untouched for years.
The 107 BTC were sent to a unique “burn address” starting with “11111”. Coins sent to such addresses—which have no private key—cannot ever be recovered or spent again, making the removal irreversible.
Glossary: A burn address is a type of blockchain address with no known owner or private key, where any coins sent are permanently locked and can never be spent. Bitcoin burning is a way to deliberately withdraw coins from circulation.
Total bitcoin locked in burn addresses rises
Current data shows there are now 807 BTC in this specific burn address, corresponding to roughly $59 million. Unlike blockchains such as Ethereum or BNB which have built-in burn mechanisms, Bitcoin does not natively support such features. As a result, “burning” on the Bitcoin network can only be done manually, by purposely sending coins to addresses with unknown ownership. In 2015, for example, the Stacks project used this same address to burn 40 BTC.
| Address | Total BTC Burned | Current Value (USD) |
|---|---|---|
| 111111…4oLvT2 | 807 | 59,000,000 |
Speculation builds over motive for burn
Galaxy Research is investigating possible reasons for this major burn. Theories range from seeking tax advantages, destroying BTC tied to illicit activities, to accidental technical mistakes. No evidence suggests these coins had a criminal background. Some suggest an advanced AI might have unwittingly made the transfer, while Bloomberg ETF analyst Eric Balchunas also noted that an AI error, tax optimization, or other exceptional event could be at play.
Coinbase executive suggests operational error
Conor Grogan, director of product operations at Coinbase, commented that this burn may have resulted from an operational mistake during cold wallet management by an exchange.
According to Grogan, technical issues during an exchange’s cold wallet operations could have led to BTC being mistakenly sent to an unrecoverable address.
So far, the true owner or sender of the funds has not been identified, nor has any claim of ownership been verified by exchanges or major platforms. This incident’s scale places it among the largest recorded bitcoin burns of 2026, drawing significant attention in the cryptocurrency sector.




