Bitcoin Intelligence
Every serious Bitcoin decision starts with data. The House of Bitcoin intelligence platform aggregates live price feeds, on-chain analytics, institutional treasury disclosures, blockchain queries, and legislative tracking — all in one place, Bitcoin-only.
Track which governments hold Bitcoin, how much, and why. Nation-state reserve strategy in real time.
Public companies with Bitcoin on their balance sheet. Sorted by holdings, with sector and ticker data.
Deep-dive into Bitcoin distribution, lost supply estimates, and institutional concentration dynamics.
Why Bitcoin's market share behaves like .COM on the internet — the protocol layer that everything else is measured against.
The top 10 countries holding Bitcoin in 2026 — from the US Strategic Reserve to El Salvador and Bhutan.
Top Bitcoin treasury companies by country — US, UK, Canada, Japan, Germany, and beyond.
On-Chain Concepts Explained
Bitcoin intelligence is only useful if you understand what the numbers mean. These are the key on-chain metrics and concepts behind every data point on this platform.
Block Height
Bitcoin's block height is the number of blocks mined since the genesis block on 3 January 2009. Each new block adds one to the count approximately every 10 minutes. Block height is the canonical measure of Bitcoin's chain progress — it is how timestamps, halvings, and protocol upgrades are scheduled.
Mempool & Fees
The mempool is the queue of unconfirmed transactions waiting to be included in a block. When network demand is high, the mempool fills and users must pay higher fees to get prioritised. Fee rates are denominated in satoshis per virtual byte (sat/vB). Monitoring the mempool tells you the current cost of transacting and the state of network demand in real time.
UTXO Model
Bitcoin uses an Unspent Transaction Output (UTXO) model rather than account balances. Every bitcoin you own is technically an output from a previous transaction that has not yet been spent. Your wallet balance is the sum of all UTXOs associated with your addresses. This model is critical for privacy analysis, coin control, and understanding on-chain transaction structure.
Hash Rate
Hash rate measures the total computational power securing the Bitcoin network — how many SHA-256 hashing operations are performed per second by all miners combined. A higher hash rate means more energy and capital is committed to the network, making it more expensive to attack. It is the most direct measure of Bitcoin's security budget.
Halving Cycle
Every 210,000 blocks (roughly four years), Bitcoin's block subsidy is cut in half. This programmatic supply reduction is baked into the protocol and cannot be changed. The halving reduces the rate at which new BTC enters circulation, tightening supply against any given level of demand. Four halvings have occurred: 2012, 2016, 2020, and 2024.
Address Clustering
Address clustering is an on-chain analysis technique that groups Bitcoin addresses likely controlled by the same entity. Common-input ownership heuristics and change-address patterns allow analysts to build a picture of entity-level holdings from pseudonymous address data. This is the methodology behind the Treasury Tracker and Address Book.
Bitcoin Intelligence — Common Questions
Answers to the most common questions about Bitcoin on-chain data, treasury tracking, price feeds, and the tools on this platform.
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