CRYPTO MARKET CAP CALCULATOR
What is the Crypto Market Cap Calculator?
This advanced crypto market cap calculator allows you find out what would be the price of a token of your interest if it reaches the market capitalization of another token. When choosing to hold or DCA into a token, this will help you understand how much potential for growth or decline a particular asset has.
COMPARE MARKET CAP OF TWO COINS
ONE WITH THE MARKET CAP OF
The Crypto Market Cap Calculator allows you to apply the market capitalization of one asset to another, showing what price a target asset would need to reach to match a reference asset's total market cap. This 'what if' calculation is one of the most common frameworks in crypto for estimating price potential — particularly for smaller assets being compared to Bitcoin, Ethereum, or traditional asset classes.
Market cap comparisons work by dividing the reference asset's total market cap by the target asset's circulating supply. If Bitcoin has a market cap of $1 trillion and Ethereum has 120 million coins in circulation, the calculator shows the ETH price required for Ethereum to match Bitcoin's current market cap. These calculations are widely used in the crypto community to frame upside scenarios in concrete terms.
Use these comparisons critically rather than as price predictions. Market caps are not fixed targets — the reference asset's market cap changes as its price changes. Additionally, different assets have very different supply mechanics: some have inflationary supplies, some have burned tokens, and some have large portions locked in vesting schedules. Circulating supply versus total supply versus fully diluted supply all produce different results and need to be specified clearly.
The calculator is most useful for stress-testing your own valuation assumptions. Rather than asking 'where will asset X go,' it frames the question as 'what would need to happen for X to reach Y's market cap, and is that plausible given the underlying dynamics?' This reframing helps avoid both excessive pessimism and unfounded optimism about price targets.