The Big Idea
Bitcoin is the original cryptocurrency, launched in January 2009 by an anonymous person or group using the name Satoshi Nakamoto. It’s the largest cryptocurrency by market capitalization and the one most people mean when they say “crypto.” Altcoins — short for “alternative coins” — are essentially every cryptocurrency that isn’t Bitcoin. There are thousands of them, ranging from major platforms like Ethereum (the second-largest crypto) down to tiny tokens that may have only existed for a few weeks. Some altcoins are serious technology projects with active development. Others are blatant copies of Bitcoin or pure scams. Understanding the difference between Bitcoin and altcoins, and the categories of altcoins, is foundational to making sense of the crypto market.
Think of Bitcoin and altcoins like the difference between a country’s official currency and all the other things people use as money. The US dollar is one specific thing — issued by the government, backed by US economic power, accepted everywhere in the country. Loyalty points, gift cards, casino chips, video game currencies, and various digital tokens are all “alternatives” — they have value in specific contexts but lack the universal acceptance and stability of the dollar. Most “alternative monies” are smaller, more specialized, and riskier than the dollar. The same is true of Bitcoin vs altcoins: Bitcoin has the size, recognition, and longest track record. Altcoins range from major platforms with real use cases to small experiments to outright scams. Some will succeed; most won’t.
For beginners, the temptation with crypto is to chase exotic altcoins promising 100x returns. The reality is that most altcoins fail. Bitcoin remains roughly 50% of the entire crypto market by value. Ethereum is roughly 15-20%. The thousands of remaining altcoins fight over the rest. Picking the future winners among altcoins is genuinely hard — many seemingly promising projects have collapsed completely. Understanding the basic structure of Bitcoin vs altcoins, and recognizing that not all altcoins are equal, is essential before risking real money in crypto trading.
What Makes Bitcoin Different
The Original
Bitcoin was the first successful cryptocurrency. It solved the problem of “double-spending” digital money without requiring a central authority. This was a major technical achievement that enabled everything that followed in the crypto space.
The Largest
Bitcoin’s market capitalization (price × circulating supply) consistently leads all cryptocurrencies. As of recent years, Bitcoin alone often exceeds $1 trillion in market cap, more than the next several altcoins combined.
The Most Decentralized
Bitcoin’s network is the most decentralized of any cryptocurrency. Its mining is spread globally across thousands of operators. No single entity controls more than a small fraction of the network. This decentralization is harder to achieve than most realize, and most altcoins are significantly less decentralized.
The Simplest
Bitcoin’s design is intentionally simple compared to altcoins. It does one thing: enable peer-to-peer value transfer. It doesn’t run smart contracts, doesn’t host applications, doesn’t try to be a “world computer.” This simplicity makes it more secure and predictable.
Fixed Supply
Bitcoin has a maximum supply of 21 million coins. This cap is mathematically enforced and cannot be changed without the agreement of essentially the entire network. The fixed supply makes Bitcoin a deflationary asset — its scarcity increases over time.
Most Recognized
“Crypto” and “Bitcoin” are nearly synonymous in popular consciousness. When media discusses cryptocurrency, they’re usually showing Bitcoin’s price chart. This brand recognition has practical value — institutional investors are more comfortable with Bitcoin than altcoins.
The Major Altcoin Categories
Smart Contract Platforms
Networks designed to run programs (smart contracts) on top of their blockchains:
- Ethereum (ETH) — The second-largest crypto. The platform where most decentralized applications (dApps), tokens, and DeFi run.
- Solana (SOL) — Faster and cheaper than Ethereum, with trade-offs in decentralization.
- Cardano (ADA) — Academic-research-driven blockchain.
- Avalanche (AVAX) — Customizable blockchain platform.
- Polkadot (DOT) — Multi-chain interoperability platform.
Layer 2 Solutions
Networks built on top of Ethereum (or other Layer 1s) to make transactions faster and cheaper:
- Arbitrum — Major Ethereum scaling solution
- Optimism — Another major Ethereum L2
- Polygon — Multiple scaling approaches
- Base — Coinbase’s L2 built on Optimism
Stablecoins
Cryptocurrencies designed to maintain a stable value (usually pegged to the US dollar). Covered separately as they have specific characteristics.
Memecoins
Tokens with no fundamental purpose beyond cultural appeal:
- Dogecoin (DOGE) — Started as a joke in 2013, became a real (if speculative) market
- Shiba Inu (SHIB) — Dogecoin imitation that gained substantial market cap
- Various trending memecoins that come and go
Memecoins are pure speculation. Some have made early investors wealthy; most go to zero. Treat as gambling, not investment.
DeFi Tokens
Tokens of decentralized finance protocols:
- Uniswap (UNI) — Major decentralized exchange
- Aave (AAVE) — Lending and borrowing protocol
- Maker (MKR) — DAI stablecoin governance
Privacy Coins
Cryptocurrencies focused on transaction privacy:
- Monero (XMR) — Strong privacy by default
- Zcash (ZEC) — Optional privacy via zero-knowledge proofs
These face regulatory pressure and have been delisted from some exchanges.
Utility Tokens
Tokens with specific functions in their networks:
- Chainlink (LINK) — Oracle network for smart contracts
- Filecoin (FIL) — Decentralized storage
- The Graph (GRT) — Indexing protocol
Exchange Tokens
Tokens issued by crypto exchanges:
- BNB — Binance’s token
- FTT — FTX’s token (now essentially worthless after FTX collapsed in 2022)
- OKB — OKX’s token
Exchange tokens carry the risk of the exchange itself failing, as FTX showed dramatically.
Bitcoin Dominance
“Bitcoin dominance” is the percentage of total crypto market cap that Bitcoin represents.
How It’s Calculated
Bitcoin Dominance = Bitcoin Market Cap / Total Crypto Market Cap × 100%
Historical Range
Bitcoin dominance has ranged from below 40% (during altcoin booms) to nearly 100% (in the very early days when Bitcoin was essentially the only cryptocurrency).
What Movement Means
Rising Bitcoin dominance: Bitcoin gaining relative to altcoins. Often happens during crypto fear or institutional adoption.
Falling Bitcoin dominance: Altcoins outperforming. Often happens during euphoric phases when speculation moves to higher-risk assets.
The Indicator’s Use
Some traders use Bitcoin dominance to time their crypto exposure:
- Low Bitcoin dominance suggests “altcoin season” may be ending
- High Bitcoin dominance suggests altcoins may be due for a rally
The indicator isn’t reliable as a precise timing tool but provides context for the broader market environment.
The Reality of Most Altcoins
The Vast Majority Fail
Studies suggest 80%+ of altcoins eventually fail or essentially go to zero. Many initial coin offerings (ICOs) of 2017-2018 are now worthless. The same fate likely awaits most current altcoins.
The Survivors
The handful of altcoins that became major players (Ethereum, Solana, etc.) had specific characteristics:
- Genuine technical innovation
- Sustained development over years
- Real use cases
- Strong communities
- Network effects
The Survivorship Bias
The successful altcoins get all the attention. The thousands of failures don’t. This creates an illusion that picking altcoin winners is easier than it actually is. For every Ethereum, there are dozens of similar projects from the same era that died.
The Cycle Pattern
Altcoin markets typically follow a pattern:
- Bitcoin rallies first
- Money rotates to Ethereum and major altcoins
- Speculation moves to smaller altcoins
- Memecoins and obscure tokens have parabolic moves
- Crash hits everything, but smaller altcoins fall hardest
Investors entering at the late speculation stage typically face devastating losses.
Examples of the Bitcoin/Altcoin Dynamic
Example 1 — Sarah’s Conservative Approach
Sarah is new to crypto. She decides to allocate 70% of her crypto investment to Bitcoin, 25% to Ethereum, and 5% to a small basket of established altcoins.
This conservative approach reflects:
- Recognition that Bitcoin has the longest track record
- Acknowledgment of Ethereum as a legitimate Layer 1
- Some exposure to higher-upside but riskier altcoins
- Avoidance of the deepest speculative end of the market
Her returns over 3 years roughly track Bitcoin and Ethereum’s combined performance — solid but not spectacular. She avoided the catastrophic losses many altcoin investors experienced.
Example 2 — Jake’s Memecoin Disaster
Jake heard about Dogecoin going up 100x and wanted similar gains. He bought $5,000 of various memecoins promoted on social media.
Some quick wins early made him add more — eventually $20,000 across 10+ memecoins.
Six months later: most of his memecoins had dropped 80-95%. Two had completely failed (rug pulls). His remaining position was worth about $3,000 — an 85% loss.
Jake’s mistake: confusing isolated success stories with reproducible strategy. Most memecoins fail. The ones that succeed are essentially random. Treating crypto trading as buying “the next Dogecoin” is gambling with very poor odds.
Example 3 — Maya’s Research-Driven Approach
Maya researches before investing. She allocates her crypto portfolio:
- 50% Bitcoin (foundation)
- 30% Ethereum (smart contract platform)
- 15% across 5 established altcoins (Solana, Avalanche, Chainlink, Polygon, Cosmos)
- 5% in a “speculation” allocation she’s prepared to lose
Her speculation allocation is in newer projects she’s researched — but she’s mentally prepared to lose 100% of this portion.
This structured approach gives her exposure to crypto upside while recognizing that:
- Bitcoin and Ethereum are most likely to persist long-term
- Established altcoins have meaningful but smaller chances of success
- Speculation should only be with money you can afford to lose
Common Mistakes
- Chasing 100x dreams. Most altcoins fail; finding the rare winner is harder than it appears.
- Ignoring Bitcoin in favor of altcoins. Bitcoin is typically the safest crypto exposure.
- Trusting hype. Influencer-promoted altcoins are often paid promotions or pump-and-dump schemes.
- Buying memecoins as investment. They’re gambling, not investment.
- Treating all altcoins as equivalent. Ethereum and obscure tokens have vastly different risk profiles.
- Concentration in single altcoin. Even good projects can fail; diversify or weight toward Bitcoin.
- FOMO buying tops. Buying altcoins after they’ve already gone parabolic.
- Confusing technology with investment. Good technology doesn’t always translate to good token returns.
- Ignoring exchange tokens’ specific risks. They depend on the exchange’s solvency.
- Believing “this time is different.” Crypto cycles repeat with similar dynamics.
The Big Picture
Bitcoin and altcoins are foundational concepts for understanding crypto.
Here’s what to remember:
- Bitcoin is the original, largest, most decentralized cryptocurrency
- Altcoins are everything else — thousands of projects with varying quality
- Major categories: smart contract platforms, L2s, stablecoins, memecoins, DeFi tokens, etc.
- Most altcoins eventually fail
- The successful altcoins (Ethereum, etc.) had genuine innovation
- Bitcoin dominance reflects capital flow between Bitcoin and altcoins
- Altcoin cycles tend to follow predictable patterns
- Memecoins are gambling, not investment
- Diversification within crypto is harder than it appears
- Conservative allocations heavily weight Bitcoin
For traders new to crypto, the simplest framework is: “Bitcoin and Ethereum first, everything else later, after substantial research.” This isn’t because Bitcoin and Ethereum are guaranteed winners — they’re not — but because they have the longest track records and most established positions in the ecosystem.
The temptation to chase smaller altcoins for 10x or 100x returns is strong. Some traders genuinely make these returns. But for every success story, there are hundreds of failures that don’t get publicized. The expected value of memecoin and obscure altcoin trading is typically negative once you account for the full distribution of outcomes.
Some practical principles:
Size your crypto allocation appropriately. Crypto remains highly volatile and risky. Most financial advisors suggest no more than 5-10% of net worth in crypto for most investors. Some sophisticated investors go higher; most should not.
Within your crypto allocation, weight toward Bitcoin. Even crypto-bullish allocations typically have 50%+ in Bitcoin. The reasoning: Bitcoin is most likely to persist as a viable asset class long-term.
Add Ethereum for smart contract exposure. Ethereum represents a different bet than Bitcoin — exposure to smart contracts, DeFi, and the broader application layer of crypto.
Be very selective with other altcoins. Major altcoins beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum should be small portions of your crypto allocation, not the focus.
Avoid memecoins and obscure tokens. Treat these as pure gambling. If you participate, do so with money you’ve explicitly designated as expendable.
Beware exchange-specific tokens. The FTX collapse in 2022 made FTT (FTX’s token) essentially worthless overnight. Exchange tokens carry the risk of the exchange failing.
The crypto space evolves rapidly. New categories emerge, projects rise and fall, regulations shift. The fundamentals remain: Bitcoin is the safest and most established, altcoins span a spectrum from serious to scammy, and the further you move from Bitcoin in your allocation, the higher your risk.
Some traders specialize in altcoin trading — researching projects deeply, watching for technical and fundamental signals, trading actively. This can work but requires substantial time investment and acceptance of high variance. For most retail traders, simpler exposure makes more sense.
One specific warning: regulatory action against crypto continues evolving. Privacy coins have been delisted from some exchanges. Various tokens face SEC questions about whether they’re unregistered securities. Regulatory risks add to crypto’s already substantial volatility.
The crypto market exists in cycles. Major bull markets (2017, 2021) are followed by extended bear markets. Many altcoins that look promising during bulls collapse during bears. Successful crypto investors typically maintain perspective across cycles rather than chasing the latest trend.
Whatever your crypto strategy, understand the basic structure first. Bitcoin is one thing. Altcoins are thousands of other things with vastly different characteristics. Understanding this distinction prevents the most common beginner mistakes.
Related Terms
- What Are Crypto Wallets? — How to hold crypto
- CEX vs DEX — Where to trade crypto
- What Are Stablecoins? — A specific altcoin category
- Crypto Spot vs Futures — How to trade crypto
- What Is Market Cap? — How crypto value is measured
← Back to the Complete Trading Terms Glossary
Focus on the process. Trust the stats. Stay consistent.