Bitcoin Price
BTC Performance
Bitcoin Dominance
ETF Flows
Fear & Greed Index
Dollar-Cost Averaging
Bitcoin Health Score
Market Narrative
Funding Rate
Open Interest
Liquidations (24h)
Bitcoin Network Stats
Lightning Network
Difficulty Adjustment
Recent Blocks
Whale Alerts
Mempool Fees
Network Hashrate
Halving Countdown
Breaking News Feed
Activity Log
What is Bitcoin Pulse?
Bitcoin Pulse gives you a single page with live Bitcoin price, network health, ETF flows, derivatives, and sentiment data. It pulls from public APIs, auto-refreshes on its own, and costs nothing. No account required.
FAQ
You see a live feed from Coinbase via WebSocket. If that connection drops, CoinCap kicks in as a backup. The 24-hour high, low, volume, and percent change all come from Coinbase market data. Charts and performance numbers use Coinbase candle data for historical prices.
Three tiers. The BTC price streams live via WebSocket. Mempool fees, whale alerts, and network stats refresh every 30 seconds. Performance data, hashrate, dominance, derivatives, and news refresh every 3 minutes. Fear & Greed updates once a day, and ETF flows update after US market close. You never need to reload.
A fullscreen layout you can run on a second monitor. Press M to enter, ESC to exit. You get all the key data cards, a live news feed, and the market narrative on one screen. Works best on 1080p displays or larger.
A 21VOX original metric scoring Bitcoin's health from 0 to 100. It blends ten indicators in three groups: Network (hashrate trend, difficulty adjustment, median fees, mempool congestion), Market (7-day and 30-day price trends, volume, stability), and Derivatives (funding rate neutrality, liquidation pressure). The score recalculates whenever its inputs change. Labels range from CRITICAL (0-20) through WEAK, MODERATE, STRONG, up to EXCELLENT (81-100).
A plain-English summary generated from template logic, not AI. It reads the live data (price movement, sentiment, liquidations, mempool conditions, your DCA performance) and writes a short briefing. Whenever the data changes, the narrative rewrites itself. You get a quick read instead of parsing every number on your own.
Alternative.me publishes this daily score, ranging from 0 (Extreme Fear) to 100 (Extreme Greed). It factors in market volatility, momentum, social media activity, Bitcoin dominance, and Google Trends. Periods of extreme fear have historically come before price recoveries; extreme greed has come before corrections. You can explore 30-day trends and methodology on the full Fear & Greed Index page.
You see Bitcoin's price change across six timeframes: 7 days, 30 days, 1 year, year-to-date, 5 years, and 10 years. Green means gains, red means losses. Historical prices come from Coinbase candle data and update as the live price moves.
Dollar-cost averaging means buying a fixed dollar amount of Bitcoin on a regular schedule, regardless of price. Pick your amount and frequency (daily, weekly, or monthly) in the DCA card to see what that strategy would have returned over the past year. You get total invested, current value, return percentage, and BTC accumulated.
Daily net money moving into or out of US spot Bitcoin exchange-traded funds. Green means net inflows that day; red means net outflows. The card also shows a 7-day bar chart, total assets under management, and a streak counter. Data updates once a day after US market close.
Every few hours, long and short traders on Bitcoin perpetual futures settle a small payment between them. When the rate is positive, longs pay shorts, which signals bullish crowding. When negative, shorts pay longs, signaling bearish crowding. Near zero means balanced positioning. The card includes the annualized rate, a countdown to the next funding event, and a sentiment label. Data comes from Binance futures.
When a leveraged trader's collateral can no longer cover their losses, the exchange force-closes the position. That is a liquidation. This card tallies the dollar value of long (bullish) and short (bearish) liquidations over the past 24 hours. Spikes in liquidations usually coincide with sharp volatile moves and sometimes mark short-term turning points.
The total value of unsettled Bitcoin futures contracts across exchanges. When open interest rises, new money is entering the market. When it falls, traders are closing positions. You see the total in both USD and BTC, the 24-hour change, and the long/short ratio when available.
Bitcoin's share of the total crypto market cap. When dominance rises, money is moving out of altcoins and into Bitcoin, a typical risk-off pattern. When it falls, money is spreading into altcoins, suggesting higher risk appetite. A 30-day sparkline shows you the recent trend.
Current recommended transaction fees in sat/vB at three priority levels: high, medium, and low. You also see projected next blocks with transaction counts and fee ranges so you can decide what to pay for your next Bitcoin transaction. Data refreshes every 30 seconds from mempool.space.
Total computing power securing the Bitcoin network, measured in exahashes per second (EH/s). The 30-day sparkline tracks the trend, and you get the current value, 30-day change, and low/high/average stats. More hashrate means stronger network security.
The largest unconfirmed Bitcoin transactions sitting in the mempool right now, filtered to 5 BTC or more. Big movements like these can indicate notable market activity. Each entry links to mempool.space so you can inspect the full transaction. Refreshes every 30 seconds.
Every 210,000 blocks (roughly four years), the block reward miners earn gets cut in half. Each halving slows the rate of new Bitcoin entering circulation. The halving countdown tells you how many blocks remain until the next one.
A payment layer built on top of the Bitcoin blockchain. Lightning channels let you send Bitcoin instantly for very low fees. Capacity is the total BTC locked in those channels. Node and channel counts show how large the network has grown.
No. Bitcoin Pulse displays publicly available data in a readable format. Nothing here is financial, investment, or trading advice. Do your own research before making any financial decisions.
Have more questions? Read our Bitcoin glossary or What is Bitcoin? for deeper explanations.