Bitcoin Explained in Plain English
You don't need to understand how the internet's routing protocols work to send an email. You don't need to understand how the banking system's settlement layer works to use a debit card. But with Bitcoin, a basic understanding of how it works builds the confidence to actually use it.
Here's Bitcoin in plain English.
It's a ledger
At its core, Bitcoin is a digital ledger — a record of who sent what to whom. Think of it like a giant spreadsheet that tracks every transaction ever made. But instead of being stored on one company's server, this ledger is copied across thousands of computers around the world. Every computer has the same copy. If one tries to cheat, all the others reject it.
How Bitcoin Transactions and Blocks Work
Transactions get bundled into blocks
When you send Bitcoin to someone, that transaction gets broadcast to the network. Roughly every 10 minutes, a batch of pending transactions gets bundled together into a "block." Each block is mathematically linked to the previous block, forming a chain. That's where the name "blockchain" comes from.
Miners secure the network
Who decides which transactions go into the next block? Miners. These are specialized computers that compete to solve a mathematical puzzle. The first one to solve it gets to add the next block and earns a reward in Bitcoin. This process — called "proof of work" — is what makes the network secure. To cheat the system, you'd need to control more computing power than all the other miners combined. That's effectively impossible.
Bitcoin's Fixed Supply and No Central Authority
The supply is fixed
Bitcoin launched on January 3, 2009. From the very beginning, the rules were set in code: there will only ever be 21 million Bitcoin. No one can change this. No CEO, no board of directors, no government. The last Bitcoin will be mined around the year 2140. Every four years, the mining reward gets cut in half, making new Bitcoin harder and harder to produce. This is the opposite of how dollars work — where the supply can be expanded at will.
Using Bitcoin Without a Bank Account
You don't need a bank
To use Bitcoin, you don't need permission from anyone. You don't need a bank account. You don't need to pass a credit check. All you need is a wallet — a piece of software that holds your private keys — learn about wallet types here. Your private keys are what prove you own your Bitcoin. As long as you control your keys, you control your money. No one can freeze it, seize it, or stop you from sending it.