Building on earlier 2026 predictions like The Motley Fool's $250,000 target, new models project a 70% probability that Bitcoin will reach a new all-time high in 2026, surpassing its 2025 peak of $126,000 from current levels around $89,000—a 42% rise. This outlook challenges the traditional four-year halving cycle in favor of macro influences.
Bitcoin's traditional four-year halving cycle has driven past rallies, with the 2024 event cutting issuance to about 450 coins daily ($40 million at current prices, or $15 billion annually). However, 2025 saw a peak at $126,000 followed by a pullback amid rising Treasury yields, tariffs, and ETF outflows, signaling shifts toward institutional and macro drivers.
From $89,000, surpassing $126,000 by end-2026 requires ~3% monthly compounding growth (or 6% for mid-year). A stochastic model incorporating 41% annualized volatility and drift toward Citi's $143,000 year-end target estimates a 70% chance of a new high in 2026. Odds of no peak by the 2028 halving fall to single digits under optimistic scenarios, though conservative paths suggest mid-teens risk if 2027 consolidates.
Key enablers include ETF inflows matching/exceeding supply (Citi eyes $15 billion in 2026), stabilizing real yields, expanded retail access via brokerages/banks, clearer regulations (U.S. stablecoins, EU MiCA), and nearing 20 million mined coins for scarcity. A 2026 high could usher in sustained uptrends with milder corrections, positioning halvings as routine by 2028 amid mainstream adoption.