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⇆ Comparison tools

Compare any two cryptocurrencies, side by side

Direct head-to-head comparison for any pair of cryptocurrencies: live prices, market cap, supply, ATH/ATL distance, 24h/7d/30d/1Y returns, and our quantitative price prediction for both coins. Pick from popular pairs below or build your own.

Coins to choose from

500+

all tracked coins

Metrics compared

14

price · supply · returns · forecast

Possible pairs

125K+

unique combinations

Updated

hourly

live spot + market data

Pick any two coins to compare price, market cap, supply, momentum, and 30-day forecasts head-to-head.

Popular comparisons

Build your own comparison

Any two coin slugs work — just visit /compare/{coin-a}-vs-{coin-b}/.

For example: /compare/bitcoin-vs-ethereum/ or /compare/solana-vs-cardano/.

How to read a comparison

What the side-by-side metrics tell you

Each comparison page is built from real-time data: live spot prices (refreshed hourly), market caps, 24h/7d/30d/1Y returns, supply metrics (circulating, max), ATH/ATL distance, and the quantitative forecast output from our five-model ensemble.

The most useful signal is usually the relative return spread at the same horizon — if Coin A returned +40% over 30 days while Coin B was flat, the spread is the dominant signal. Pair that with the cap ratio (Coin A's mcap / Coin B's mcap) and you have a rough idea of relative momentum + room to run.

Common comparison patterns: L1 vs L1 (BTC vs ETH, ETH vs SOL, BNB vs SOL) for thesis-level relative positioning. L2 vs L2 (Arbitrum vs Optimism, Base vs zkSync) for rollup-economics analysis. Stablecoin vs stablecoin (USDT vs USDC, DAI vs FRAX) for issuer-risk weighing.

The forecast columns at the bottom of each comparison show our model's 30-day base case for both coins. Use them to gut-check whether the implied future spread matches your thesis — if both coins have similar forecasts and you expect divergence, your view is contrarian.

FAQ

Crypto comparison — frequently asked questions

How do I compare any two coins?

Visit /compare/{coin-a}-vs-{coin-b}/ using their slugs (e.g. /compare/bitcoin-vs-ethereum/). Common ticker aliases (ripple, btc, eth, doge, sol, etc.) auto-resolve to the canonical slug. The "Build your own comparison" picker above does this for you.

Which metrics are most useful?

Relative return at the same horizon, market-cap ratio, and the 30-day forecast spread. Together these tell you: which coin's been winning, the cap differential, and where the model thinks the spread is heading.

Can I compare more than two coins?

Not in a single page yet. For three-way comparisons, view the individual prediction pages side-by-side, or browse the full coins archive at /coins/ with sorting + filters.

Are the comparisons updated in real-time?

Spot prices and market data refresh hourly. The prediction model output (used in the forecast columns) is cached for 60 seconds and recomputed on every page load.

Why isn't a specific coin available?

We track the top 600 coins by market cap (~880 published). If a coin isn't found, it's either below our rank cutoff or hasn't been indexed yet. Newly listed coins typically appear within 24 hours.

Methodology

How to evaluate two cryptocurrencies side by side

Comparing two cryptocurrencies is not a single decision — it is a stack of decisions that have to be made in the right order. Most retail comparisons stop at price and 24-hour change, which is the worst possible basis for an allocation decision because price alone says nothing about supply, distribution, demand, or the asymmetry of the next move.

The framework we use on every comparison page is built around five questions, in order of priority:

  1. What is each project actually for? A layer-1 settlement network (Bitcoin, Ethereum) is not comparable to a payments token (XRP, Stellar) or a meme asset (Dogecoin, Shiba Inu) on the same axes. Identify the category first; the relevant metrics flow from there.
  2. What is the supply structure? Compare circulating supply, max supply, fully diluted valuation (FDV), and emission schedule. A coin with $1B market cap and 50% of supply still unlocked is fundamentally different from one with $1B market cap and 99% circulating — the former carries a structural sell-side overhang the latter does not.
  3. Where does the demand come from? Real on-chain activity (active addresses, fee revenue, transaction volume) separates productive networks from speculative ones. We surface 30-day fee revenue and active-address counts in every comparison so you can sanity-check the narrative against the data.
  4. What is the realized volatility? Two coins can have similar 12-month returns with wildly different drawdown paths. Realized 30-day volatility, max drawdown over the trailing year, and Sharpe-ratio approximations are surfaced in the comparison grid so you can see which has the worse path to the same destination.
  5. What does the forecast say, and how confident is it? Every coin we cover has a published 12-month forecast with an explicit confidence interval. A coin with a +50% point forecast but a ±90% confidence band is a very different bet from a coin with a +30% point forecast and ±25% bands.

The pairs traders actually compare

Some comparisons get run on this page far more than others — the same handful of pairs come up in our search logs every week. The most common are Bitcoin vs Ethereum (the foundational allocation decision in every crypto portfolio), Ethereum vs Solana (the smart-contract platform war), Bitcoin vs Solana (when traders want layer-1 conviction with higher beta), and XRP vs Stellar (the payments-rail comparison).

For meme-asset pairs — DOGE vs SHIB, for instance — the comparison should focus almost entirely on holder distribution and exchange concentration; fundamentals are irrelevant and the forecast confidence band will be appropriately wide. For DeFi-token pairs — UNI vs AAVE — fee revenue and total value locked (TVL) are the most useful comparators.

What this tool is not

This is not a portfolio optimizer and it is not financial advice. It is a fast way to see two cryptocurrencies on the same screen across consistent metrics, so the decision you make next is informed by data rather than vibes. The forecast outputs are model-driven and explicitly probabilistic — see how our predictions work for the full methodology.

Guide

How to compare two cryptocurrencies

  1. 1

    Pick the first coin

    Use the left dropdown — search by symbol (BTC) or name (Bitcoin).

  2. 2

    Pick the second coin

    Use the right dropdown. The grid populates instantly.

  3. 3

    (Optional) Add a third coin

    Click "+ Add coin" to bring in a third column for three-way comparison.

  4. 4

    Scan the comparison grid

    Rows are grouped: market data → supply → ATH/ATL → volatility → forecast. Each row highlights the better metric.

  5. 5

    Click any coin name

    Opens the full profile page with 3,000+ words of analysis and the 12-month forecast.

  6. 6

    (Optional) Share the comparison

    The URL contains the pair (e.g. /compare/?a=btc&b=eth) and is shareable.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions about the compare cryptocurrencies

What does "compare cryptocurrencies" mean? +
It means looking at two or more coins on the same screen across the same metrics — price, market cap, supply, volatility, 12-month forecast — so you can decide which has a better risk/reward at the current moment.
Which coins can I compare? +
Any pair from the top 500 by market cap is supported with live data, plus 1,000+ long-tail tokens with daily-refresh data.
Which metrics are shown in the comparison? +
Live price, 24h / 7d / 30d / 1y change, market cap, fully diluted valuation (FDV), 24h trading volume, circulating supply, max supply, all-time high, all-time low, distance from ATH, 30-day realized volatility, and our 12-month forecast with confidence band.
Can I compare more than two coins? +
Yes — up to four coins side-by-side. Performance drops on mobile beyond three columns.
Why does the same coin show a different market cap on other sites? +
Market-cap formulas vary by data provider — some include locked / vesting / treasury tokens, some only count freely-circulating supply. We follow CoinPaprika circulating-supply methodology for consistency.
Are forecasts included in the comparison? +
Yes — our 12-month forecast price and confidence interval are shown for each coin alongside spot data. The forecast methodology is published at /how-predictions-work/.
How often is comparison data updated? +
Live spot prices refresh every 60 seconds. Deeper metrics (supply, mcap, ATH) refresh every 5 minutes. The forecast refreshes once per day.
Can I share a comparison link? +
Yes — the URL contains both coin symbols (e.g. /compare/?a=btc&b=eth) and is fully shareable. Bookmarking it preserves the pair.