A new research paper from ARK Invest and Unchained examines one of the most persistent questions in Bitcoin: whether advances in quantum computing could eventually break itâs cryptography.
The authors conclude that while the technology represents a legitimate long-term concern, it does not pose an immediate threat to the network. Published March 11 and authored by Dhruv Bansal, Tom Honzik and David Puell, the report argues that current quantum systems remain far from the capabilities required to compromise Bitcoinâs cryptographic foundations.
Bitcoin Quantum Threat Is Distant, Not Immediate
The paperâs central thesis is straightforward: quantum computing represents a real but gradual risk.
âOur two central arguments are as follows,â the authors write. âQuantum is a long-term risk but not an imminent threat. The community must continue to research and make plans for protecting the network as quantum computers improve.â
They add that even if breakthroughs occur, exploiting them against Bitcoin would be costly and slow. âIf quantum computing were to affect Bitcoinâs cryptography, the process would be protracted and undertaken at meaningful cost to the attacker.â
In practical terms, the report notes that todayâs machines fall well short of the scale needed to attack the elliptic-curve cryptography used by Bitcoin keys. Current devices operate in what researchers call the âNISQ era,â characterized by limited logical qubits and high error rates.
Breaking Bitcoinâs cryptography would require significantly more advanced systems. âTo do so would require at least 2,330 logical qubits and tens of millions to billions of quantum gates,â the authors write, far beyond the roughly hundred-qubit systems typical today.
Rather than a sudden technological shock, the paper outlines a staged progression toward any meaningful threat. The authors describe a series of milestones in quantum development. Early stages involve experimental systems with limited commercial usefulness. Later phases would see applications in fields like chemistry or materials science long before cryptographic attacks become viable.
Only in more advanced stages would quantum computers become capable of breaking elliptic-curve cryptography â and even then the process could take longer than Bitcoinâs roughly 10-minute block interval.The researchers emphasize that this gradual progression would create numerous warning signals. âIn our view, quantum development will be a gradual technological progressionânot a sudden âQ-dayâ eventâgiving markets and the Bitcoin network time to adapt.â
The implication is that the broader internet security ecosystem would likely face disruption before Bitcoin specifically becomes vulnerable. âMeaningful breakthroughs would disrupt internet security first,â the paper states, âtriggering coordinated responses well beyond Bitcoin.â
The report also estimates how much bitcoin could theoretically be vulnerable if large-scale quantum attacks became feasible. According to the analysis, roughly 1.7 million BTC stored in older P2PK address types are considered exposed but likely lost. Another 5.2 million BTC sit in address formats that could be migrated if necessary.
Combined, the authors estimate that roughly 35% of the total outstanding supply could theoretically face quantum exposure in its current form. However, because many of those coins are inactive or capable of being moved to safer address types, the researchers frame the issue as manageable rather than catastrophic.
Governance And Upgrades Remain Open Questions
While the technical threat may be distant, the report highlights governance challenges that could emerge if the ecosystem eventually needs to adopt post-quantum cryptography. Upgrading Bitcoinâs cryptographic primitives would require consensus changes, meaning coordination across developers, miners, node operators, and the broader community.
The authors also raise unresolved questions around coins whose public keys are already exposed on-chain. âThere is no consensus about protecting coins that remain vulnerable to quantum,â the report notes, pointing to ongoing debates about whether such coins should be migrated, restricted, or treated as recoverable by quantum attackers.
The researchers ultimately frame the issue as a long-range engineering problem rather than a near-term existential risk. âQuantum risk will evolve over an extended period of time, with many intermediate warning signals and decision points,â the authors conclude. âAn abrupt single point of failure is unlikely.â
At press time, Bitcoin traded at $69,496.

Featured image created with DALL.E, chart from TradingView.com
Editorial Process for bitcoinist is centered on delivering thoroughly researched, accurate, and unbiased content. We uphold strict sourcing standards, and each page undergoes diligent review by our team of top technology experts and seasoned editors. This process ensures the integrity, relevance, and value of our content for our readers.
