Bitcoin in things you can hold
Bitcoin Weigh-In answers a question that's harder than it looks: what
does one bitcoin actually buy, expressed as something you could pick up off a
table? The site renders a single BTC's purchasing power as physical commodities —
gold, silver, plutonium-238, cocaine — at true relative scale, next to a
constant 9-kg Shiba Inu so the eye has somewhere to land. Move the slider and the cube
grows or shrinks; scrub the date and you can watch a bitcoin's weight in gold drift
across thirteen years of market history.
Under the hood is a public, daily-updated dataset of commodity prices in BTC going
back to 2 January 2013, sourced from CoinGecko, GoldAPI.io and FRED with deterministic
BTC supply computed from the protocol's halving schedule. The dataset is CC-BY-4.0 and ships as CSV, JSON,
NDJSON and Parquet — useful if you're doing your own bitcoin-vs-commodities analysis.
The methodology page documents every
source, every forward-fill rule, and the cross-validation pipeline that flags
provider disagreements above 0.5%.
Per-commodity deep-dives
Each launch commodity has its own page with the live ratio, market context,
and FAQ:
Free, citable, machine-readable
The full daily archive (BTC, gold, silver, platinum, copper, Brent crude,
wheat, coffee — 2013-present) is published under Creative Commons CC-BY-4.0 at /data in CSV, JSON, NDJSON, and
Parquet. Cite as Bitcoin Weigh-In Daily Commodity Price Dataset;
attribution is the only restriction. The methodology page documents every
source, every forward-fill rule, and the cross-validation pipeline. Browse
historical purchasing power year-by-year at /snapshot.
Frequently asked questions
- What is Bitcoin Weigh-In?
- Bitcoin Weigh-In visualises one bitcoin's purchasing power as physical commodities you can actually hold — gold, silver, plutonium-238, cocaine — rendered at true relative scale next to a constant reference (a 9-kg Shiba Inu). It pairs a live, daily-updated price dataset with a side-by-side cube renderer so a glance tells you how heavy a bitcoin is, today, in things that exist.
- How much gold can 1 bitcoin buy today?
- The exact ratio updates every day at 02:00 UTC, pricing gold via Pax Gold (PAXG) on CoinGecko. Move the slider on the homepage or open /btc/gold to see the current troy-ounce equivalent, plus the historical curve back to 2013.
- How is the bitcoin-to-commodity price calculated?
- Each day's BTC-USD price (from CoinGecko) is divided by the commodity's USD-denominated price from the same day. Gold is priced via Pax Gold (PAXG) on CoinGecko, silver from GoldAPI.io, and Brent crude from FRED; historical platinum, copper, wheat, and coffee were sourced from Stooq. Bitcoin circulating supply is computed deterministically from the protocol's halving schedule. The full methodology is published at /methodology.
- Is the underlying dataset free to use?
- Yes — the full daily history of commodity-vs-BTC prices is published under Creative Commons CC-BY-4.0 as CSV, JSON, NDJSON, and Parquet at /data. Cite it as Bitcoin Weigh-In; attribution is the only restriction.
- How often does the price data update?
- The dataset rebuilds every day at 02:00 UTC via a GitHub Actions cron that fetches the previous UTC day from each source, cross-validates against Massive, and commits the new artifacts to the public repository. Forward-fill carries the previous known value across weekends and holidays so every calendar date has a row.
- Which commodities are covered?
- The live dataset covers BTC, gold, silver, platinum, copper, Brent crude, wheat, and coffee. The visualisation currently renders four — gold, silver, plutonium-238, and cocaine — chosen for the spread of densities and price-per-gram they show. Plutonium-238 and cocaine are illustrative composite prices (no public spot market); their methodology is documented at /methodology.