
Market Cap
$158.35M
24h Volume
$3.21K
Circulating
159.2M SATUSD
All-Time High
$1.68
Market Cap
$158.35M
Volume (24h)
$3.21K
Circulating Supply
159.2M SATUSD
Max Supply
N/A
1 SATUSD = $0.99
| All-Time High | $1.68 (February 22, 2025) |
| All-Time Low | $0.635574 (July 21, 2024) |
Satoshi Stablecoin (SATUSD) is a Bitcoin-collateralized USD stablecoin designed to give holders dollar-denominated stability without leaving the Bitcoin economy. Each SATUSD aims to trade at $1 and is minted against locked BTC collateral inside the protocol’s smart contracts. The design sits in the same family as DAI and crvUSD, but uses BTC as the primary backing asset rather than ETH or a basket of stablecoins.
The narrative is straightforward: hold Bitcoin, mint dollars. Instead of selling BTC into fiat to get spending stability, holders deposit BTC, draw SATUSD against it, and keep upside exposure to Bitcoin while transacting in a $1 unit of account. SATUSD is decentralized in issuance, not a centrally redeemable IOU like USDT or USDC.
The Satoshi Stablecoin price targets $1 by design. Live data on this page is aggregated from a multi-venue market feed and refreshes every 60 seconds. Small deviations from peg are normal and reflect arbitrage spread, BTC volatility, and on-chain liquidity conditions in lending pools.
What moves SATUSD around its peg:
The numbers in the price card above are live. With BTC-collateralized stablecoins, the more important question is not price but collateral health and liquidation buffers.
SATUSD is overcollateralized by Bitcoin. Users lock BTC (or wrapped BTC such as WBTC and tBTC on Ethereum, or native BTC via bridges and runes-style adapters) into a vault and mint SATUSD up to a maximum loan-to-value ratio. The protocol enforces a liquidation threshold: if collateral value falls and the LTV breaks the limit, keepers liquidate the position to protect the peg.
▼ +40.73% from ATH
| 0X70654AAD8B7734DC319D0C3608EC7B32E03FA162/0X833589FCD6EDB6E08F4C7C32D4F71B54BDA02913 |
| $0.993549 |
| Trade → |
| Uniswap V3 (Arbitrum One) | 0XB4818BB69478730EF4E33CC068DD94278E2766CB/0XFD086BC7CD5C481DCC9C85EBE478A1C0B69FCBB9 | $0.993829 | Trade → |
| Sushiswap V3 (Hemi) | 0XAD11A8BEB98BBF61DBB1AA0F6D6F2ECD87B35AFA/0XB4818BB69478730EF4E33CC068DD94278E2766CB | $1.01 | Trade → |
The peg is defended by a combination of overcollateralization, an arbitrage-friendly redemption mechanism, and a backstop reserve funded by stability fees. When SATUSD trades below $1, holders are incentivized to buy the discount and repay debt at face value. When it trades above $1, mints become more attractive and supply expands.
SATUSD has no fixed maximum supply. Issuance is endogenous and tracks demand for BTC-backed dollar leverage. Every SATUSD in circulation is matched by locked BTC collateral worth more than the debt at the time of mint.
Because issuance follows demand, total SATUSD supply expands during BTC bull markets (when users want leverage) and contracts during deep drawdowns (when vaults are closed or liquidated).
SATUSD is closest in design to DAI and crvUSD. The differences come down to collateral choice and liquidation engine.
For a Bitcoin holder, SATUSD removes the need to sell BTC for fiat and keeps long exposure to Bitcoin while spending in dollars. The trade-off is liquidation risk during sharp BTC drawdowns.
Acquiring SATUSD follows the same flow as any major DeFi stablecoin.
For active users who plan to mint rather than buy, the flow is: bridge BTC into a wrapped representation, deposit into a vault, mint SATUSD up to a conservative LTV, and monitor collateral health.
SATUSD is designed to trade at $1, so price prediction in the traditional sense is not the right frame. The relevant questions are peg stability, collateral health, and protocol growth. See our dedicated Satoshi Stablecoin forecast for scenario analysis on supply growth, peg deviations under stress, and how SATUSD compares to other BTC-collateralized stablecoins over the next 12 to 24 months.
The bullish case for SATUSD adoption is that Bitcoin holders increasingly want on-chain dollar liquidity without giving up custody. The bearish case is that BTC drawdowns can cascade into liquidations and short-term peg deviations.
SATUSD is not riskless. The risks are different from those of volatile cryptocurrencies and from centralized stablecoins.
This page is information, not financial advice. BTC-collateralized stablecoins carry liquidation, smart contract, and oracle risks that are easy to underestimate during calm markets.
At the time of writing, Satoshi Stablecoin (SATUSD) trades at $0.994654, with a 24-hour trading volume of $3.21K and a total market capitalization of $158.35M. The asset is currently ranked #218 among all tracked cryptocurrencies by market cap.
Over the last 24 hours, the SATUSD price has dropped +0.04%. On the seven-day chart, Satoshi Stablecoin has climbed +0.05%, showing mixed signals across the short and medium term. Short-term price swings are often amplified by liquidity conditions, news flow, and derivatives positioning, so traders should confirm signals across multiple indicators before acting.
Satoshi Stablecoin's all-time high of $1.68 was set on February 22, 2025. The current market price is +40.73% below that historical peak. Distance from the all-time high is a common reference point when evaluating long-term recoveries and identifying macro support or resistance levels.
Buying Satoshi Stablecoin (SATUSD) is straightforward once you know which exchange to use and which trading pair offers the best liquidity. The steps below describe the typical flow used by most investors today.
You can also use the built-in Satoshi Stablecoin converter above to estimate exactly how much SATUSD you would receive for a given amount in USD before placing an order.
Whether Satoshi Stablecoin is a good investment depends on your goals, time horizon, and tolerance for volatility. Like all cryptocurrencies, SATUSD carries significant market risk — prices can rise or fall sharply in a single day, and past performance is not a reliable indicator of future returns.
This page provides data and analysis for educational purposes only. It is not financial advice. Always do your own research, diversify, and never invest more than you can afford to lose.