2025 was Bitcoin [BTC] and Ethereum’s [ETH] coming of age era.
This year was meant to push crypto’s biggest assets into the mainstream. While there was progress on that front, BTC and ETH also confused investors, tested patience, and challenged confident predictions. The former settled into its role as the asset institutions could finally live with, while the latter spent much of the year trying to justify its financial relevance.
As the calendar turns, the question is what, if anything, actually changed heading into 2026.
2025 on the charts
Bitcoin started 2025 on shaky ground, dipped horribly by March, and then put up a great show of recovery through the middle of the year. By October, it had pushed to new highs, with ETF inflows and demand from big players.
However, that momentum didn’t last.
A pullback in November erased weeks of gains, and Bitcoin will now end the year well below its peak, trading closer to where things look hesitant.
Ethereum took a similar route, but with lesser confidence. After an early-year slump, ETH rallied hard into late summer, making a proper comeback. That move faded quickly when selling pressure returned in Q4, dragging Ethereum back towards the lower end of its yearly range.
Unlike Bitcoin, ETH struggled to hold on to its gains.
Nic Puckrin, investment analyst and co-founder of The Coin Bureau, agreed with this assessment.
“It was meant to be the year of crypto, yet Bitcoin is struggling to hold $90,000 as we head into Christmas, while gold and silver have skyrocketed to new highs, and continue to do so.”
ETFs in 2025
ETFs played a much bigger role this year, especially Bitcoin. Spot Bitcoin ETFs saw great inflows during the first half of the year, helping prices push back from weakness and pushing BTC towards its mid-year and October highs.
Even when the prices pulled back later in the year, total assets held by these ETFs stayed elevated.
This meant that long-term holders were largely staying put, even if momentary interest wobbled.
Ethereum’s ETF story was far less shiny though. Inflows picked up around mid-year, briefly in tandem with ETH’s summer rally. However, that demand was fragile. By the final quarter, Ethereum’s ETF charts had consecutive streaks of red, on the back of the token’s price decline and weaker market conditions.
Total assets fell faster than Bitcoin’s, so there’s a big gap in confidence with both assets. Heading into 2026, this gap will decide how the market views both assets.
According to Puckrin,
“It was also the year that saw BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF (IBIT) become one of the most successful launches of all time, while several altcoin ETFs were approved and have seen strong demand.”
He went on to add,
“Sometimes, during sell-offs, it can be hard to see the forest for the trees. But if we zoom out, even $90,000 Bitcoin was the stuff of dreams just a few short years ago.”







