Could Ethereum (ETH +3.19%) surpass Bitcoin (BTC +4.10%) in total market capitalization someday? This possibility of a so-called flippening, as this hypothetical event is known in crypto circles, has been a favorite thought experiment for years now because of the disruption to the ordinary state of affairs that it implies. Still, with Bitcoin’s market cap at about $1.4 trillion today, and Ethereum’s near $240 billion, the gap between these two assets is about as wide as it’s been in quite a few years.
So is it actually possible for Ethereum to become larger than Bitcoin by 2030, or is it a pipe dream?
Image source: Getty Images.
Ethereum has a narrow path to the top
How might Ethereum actually overtake Bitcoin during the next four years?
The most credible version of the flippening happening likely starts with a wildcard: quantum computing. Both Bitcoin and Ethereum rely on elliptic curve cryptography (ECC) to secure their wallets and authorize transactions. Alas, sufficiently powerful quantum computers, which might exist within the next 10 years, could crack that cryptography and enable the theft of coins.
This threat is not in any way imminent, but the point here is that it’s a security problem that needs to be solved by the developers of these two blockchains. At the moment, it looks far more likely that Ethereum will respond to the threat before Bitcoin does, which means that holdings of stored bitcoins will be vulnerable for longer.

Today’s Change
(4.10%) $2800.89
Current Price
$71042.00
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.4T
Day’s Range
$67427.00 – $71221.00
52wk Range
$60255.56 – $126079.89
Volume
54B
Bitcoin’s conservative upgrade process is known for taking years to accomplish anything. That meticulous protocol is very much a feature when you’re trying to protect a digital store of value, but it’s also a huge liability when you need to move fast. The first formal proposal for making Bitcoin more resistant against quantum attacks entered the community evaluation stage in February, but its co-author estimates that a full migration to post-quantum cryptography (PQC) for the coin could take as long as seven years — a lifetime in the crypto universe.
That prolonged state of vulnerability will probably incentivize investors to move their capital into less vulnerable assets. By some accounts, this is already happening to such a degree that it’s holding back Bitcoin’s price.
Ethereum is sprinting ahead of Bitcoin in comparison, with its co-founder, Vitalik Buterin, publishing a quantum readiness development roadmap in late February 2026. At the same time, the Ethereum Foundation, an important nonprofit that aims to shepherd the chain’s ecosystem, released a four-year plan that’s intended to implement upgrades to quickly reach a basic level of quantum resistance.
If quantum computers arrive in 2030 to 2035, which is on the early side of most predictions but still generally plausible, Ethereum could be anywhere between somewhat and fully hardened well before Bitcoin really gets its boots on. Investors won’t want to leave their wealth in Bitcoin when they could just as easily hold it in Ethereum, where they know it will be safe.

Today’s Change
(3.19%) $63.97
Current Price
$2068.65
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$250B
Day’s Range
$1985.01 – $2069.17
52wk Range
$1398.62 – $4946.05
Volume
23B
If quantum computers start to get a lot more powerful quite quickly during the next few years, that setup very well could be the path to Ethereum flipping Bitcoin.
It probably won’t happen
There’s at least one big reason the flippening probably won’t occur, and it has little to do with the risk posed by quantum computing.
In terms of its competitors within crypto, Bitcoin is far from being Ethereum’s arch-nemesis. That designation belongs to Solana, with many other networks also vying for portions of Ethereum’s traditional stronghold of smart contracts and decentralized finance (DeFi). As the process of competition for capital plays out during the coming years, it’s simply not probable that Ethereum will capture enough new inflows to surpass Bitcoin, given how many other players are looking for a slice of the same pie.
Of course, Ethereum and Bitcoin will both continue to be good investments, and they both belong in most crypto portfolios. Just be aware that if you own a lot of either, the next handful of years are going to offer a big opportunity for Ethereum to succeed where Bitcoin is likely to be a laggard.
