Coinbase Council Warns 7 Million Bitcoin May Face Future Quantum Risk

TL;DR

  • Coinbase’s Quantum Advisory Council says post-quantum migration planning should begin before quantum attacks become practical.
  • The report estimates about 7 million BTC are quantum-vulnerable because public keys are exposed through legacy formats or address reuse.
  • About 1.7 million BTC are said to sit in legacy Pay-to-Public-Key addresses, including early mined and potentially abandoned coins.
  • The council frames the issue as a long-term governance challenge, not an immediate emergency.

Coinbase’s Quantum Advisory Council has warned that Bitcoin and other crypto networks need to begin planning for post-quantum migration well before quantum computers can realistically break today’s public-key cryptography.

In a June 11 report titled “Post-Quantum Migration and Abandoned Coins,” the council framed the issue as both a technical migration problem and a governance dilemma. The core question is not only how to move users to quantum-safe addresses, but what the network should do about coins that are never migrated.

The report says no current quantum computer can break the cryptography securing crypto assets today. However, it argues that the risk is strategically important because decentralized ecosystems can take years to coordinate major upgrades, especially when user funds, abandoned wallets, and property rights are involved.

Why Some Bitcoin Is More Exposed

The Coinbase report estimates that roughly 7 million BTC are currently quantum-vulnerable. That figure includes coins in address types where public keys are already visible, as well as coins tied to address reuse, where a public key becomes exposed after a transaction is broadcast.

One especially sensitive category is legacy Pay-to-Public-Key addresses. The report says about 1.7 million BTC are held in these P2PK addresses, where public keys are directly visible. That bucket includes early mined coins, including coins associated with Bitcoin’s earliest history, as well as funds that may be lost or abandoned.

The issue is different from an ordinary software upgrade. Active users can be told to move funds to quantum-safe addresses once suitable signature schemes are ready. Abandoned coins, lost wallets, and dormant early addresses are harder because nobody may be available to move them.

The Governance Dilemma

The council outlined several broad paths. One option is a hard migration deadline, after which non-migrated vulnerable funds could be frozen or burned to prevent future quantum theft. That approach prioritizes network safety but raises serious property-rights questions.

A second option is to preserve rights and do nothing, leaving vulnerable coins untouched. That avoids forced intervention but could allow future attackers to steal exposed funds if quantum capabilities eventually become strong enough.

The report also discusses middle-ground ideas. These include rate-limiting how much can be moved from older addresses in any one block-like time interval, sometimes described as an hourglass mechanism, and using zero-knowledge proofs such as BIP-361 to let users prove ownership of old keys without exposing sensitive information.

Planning Before The Crisis

The council’s practical recommendation is to separate engineering work from the governance fight. In other words, the industry can start building and testing quantum-safe signatures now while still debating how abandoned or vulnerable coins should be handled later.

That distinction matters. Waiting until quantum attacks are imminent would leave networks trying to coordinate technical upgrades, wallet migrations, exchange support, and community governance under pressure. Starting early gives developers and users more room to test systems and avoid rushed decisions.

For Bitcoin holders, the takeaway is not that coins are suddenly unsafe today. It is that long-lived digital assets need long-lived security planning. The more value sits in crypto networks over decades, the more important it becomes to plan for cryptographic transitions before they become emergencies.

Coinbase’s report adds another major voice to that conversation. The debate over abandoned coins will not be easy, but the council’s message is clear: the post-quantum migration question is no longer theoretical enough to ignore.

Originally published by the Coinbase Quantum Advisory Council at Coinbase Blog

read the full story

The Fed Just Changed the Rules for Markets | What's Next For Bitcoin?

Markets expected a routine FOMC meeting. Instead, Kevin Warsh quietly dismantled key parts of the…

Fidelity Debuts GENIUS Act Aligned Stablecoin Reserve Fund With 0.25% Fee

Fidelity has launched a government money market fund designed for stablecoin issuers managing…

Bitcoin Climbs Past $63K as Israel-Hezbollah Ceasefire Reopens U.S.-Iran Talks

Bitcoin punched back above $63,000. The move came fast, tied directly to reports of a ceasefire…

 Strive’s SATA Snaps Up 603 BTC as Daily Dividends Launch Amid Market Turbulence

TL;DR: Strive’s preferred stock product accumulated an estimated 603 BTC in purchases during…

ZachXBT Investigates User Who Asked for Help Recovering Frozen Bitcoin

TL;DR: Amount under review: The case involves a total of 5.7357 BTC, with an estimated value by the…

Franklin proposes ETF that reinvests stock dividends into Bitcoin exposure

The proposed fund would blend U.S. equities with a systematic Bitcoin accumulation strategy powered…

Grant Cardone scoops up 282 BTC as crypto selloff deepens

Cardone Capital has purchased another 282 Bitcoin worth about $18 million as the cryptocurrency…

EU targets privacy coins while leaving Bitcoin transfers untouched

The European Union has approved anti-money laundering rules that will ban regulated crypto firms…

Franklin Templeton new ETFs would convert US companies stock dividends into Bitcoin exposure

Franklin Templeton, the $1.78 trillion asset management firm, is attempting to push cryptocurrency…

Is Bitcoin-Backed Digital Credit Dead After MicroStrategy’s STRC Crash?

Digital credit survived its first test as STRC fell below par, while Bitcoin network activity hit…

Mert crowns Zcash as Bitcoin faces Europe privacy backlash

Zcash has gained renewed attention after discussions around Europe’s planned crypto compliance…

Bitcoin Slides Four Days Straight as DeFi and Smart-Contract Tokens Take the Worst of It

Bitcoin can’t catch a break. Four consecutive days of losses have dragged the broader crypto…

$13B Bitcoin options expiry looms: Will bulls endure more pain in June?

Bitcoin bears hold the upper hand in the upcoming Bitcoin options expiry, a potentially early…

Bitcoin Holds Above $63K as $42.2M in Liquidations Clears Leveraged Bets

On June 19, bitcoin experienced volatile, “zigzag” trading between $62,300 and $63,300,…

Crypto Markets Hit by Liquidation Wave After Bitcoin Breakdown

TL;DR: Geopolitical cancellation: Technical negotiations scheduled in Switzerland between the United…

GoMining launches Bitcoin commerce tool that cuts out fiat

GoMining has launched a Bitcoin payment infrastructure stack that settles transactions directly on…

Bitcoin reclaims $63K as Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire revives U.S.-Iran talks hopes

Bitcoin has climbed back above $63,000 after reports of an Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire have renewed…

Bitcoin Network Struggles as Small Transactions Clog Blocks

The Bitcoin network is buckling under the weight of its own users. It’s not a dramatic crisis…