If you’ve got $1,000 you don’t need for other things, and you want it to grow via investing in crypto, you’ll need to look beyond which chart looks pretty this week. That’s especially true considering leading cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin (BTC 1.09%) and Cardano (ADA 1.72%) are both down by around 27% in the last 30 days.
But the future will likely look quite different than the recent past for both of these assets, so let’s examine each and determine which is the better place to allocate $1,000.
Image source: Getty Images.
Bitcoin’s edge is that it can stay mostly the same
Bitcoin’s supply famously has a hard supply cap of just 21 million coins that can ever exist, and a schedule that slows new issuance from mining over time through events called halvings. The scarcity implied by those supply dynamics are part of the reason why it’s considered to be a store of value, even if its price can’t be counted on to be the same across any given set of days.
More importantly, demand for the coin has a very big on-ramp that is likely to drive demand over time. The existence of spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds (ETFs) since 2024 means that anyone with a brokerage or retirement account can buy and hold the asset very conveniently.

Today’s Change
(-1.09%) $-744.15
Current Price
$67295.00
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.3T
Day’s Range
$66636.00 – $68110.00
52wk Range
$60255.56 – $126079.89
Volume
31B
With a very rough start to 2026, U.S. Bitcoin ETFs collectively saw about $1.1 billion in outflows from Feb. 10 through Feb. 23. But the odds are very strong that the same scarcity and value features that drove investors to load up in 2025 will lure them back once again, as there aren’t many other digital stores of value, and none with a history as long as Bitcoin’s.
Cardano still has to prove that people will want to use it
Unlike Bitcoin, Cardano is primarily a smart-contract platform, meaning it enables developers to create applications that exist and execute on its blockchain. It has a handful of different features that support that core mission, and it’s still in active development.

Today’s Change
(-1.72%) $-0.00
Current Price
$0.25
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$9.2B
Day’s Range
$0.25 – $0.26
52wk Range
$0.23 – $1.01
Volume
335M
The problem is that features aren’t the same as actual adoption, and in Cardano’s case, they aren’t driving much adoption at all. Cardano’s decentralized finance (DeFi) capital footprint remains small: There’s only around $121 million in total value locked (TVL) on the network, and just $37 million in stablecoin value.
That’s not enough of a capital base to attract institutional finance, which needs far larger volumes of capital to transact, nor is it sufficient to stimulate a vibrant DeFi ecosystem, as there simply aren’t enough stablecoins parked to suggest that there are buyers for new services. Furthermore, without capital migrating to the chain to participate in its on-chain economy, there’s not much reason for anyone to buy the coin compared to the coins of its larger and more capable competitors, like Ethereum.
So if you’re looking to invest $1,000 in crypto, Bitcoin is by far the better buy, especially if you’re just starting to build a diversified crypto portfolio. Cardano could still be developed to have some features that give it a real investment thesis in the future, but for now, it doesn’t have a niche where it clearly excels, and that’s a big risk.
