What $1,000 in Bitcoin, Ethereum, And XRP Five Years Ago Is Worth Today

Photo of Sam Daodu
By Sam Daodu Published

Quick Read

  • Splitting $1,000 evenly across Bitcoin, Ethereum, and XRP in May 2021 returned just 8% annually, a figure that barely matches historical S&P 500 performance.

  • Ethereum was the only loser of the three, down 17% over five years despite briefly hitting a new all-time high above $4,900 in August 2025.

  • Entry point matters more than asset selection. Buying near the May 2021 peak turned three fundamentally strong cryptos into a near-flat portfolio.

  • It sounds nuts, but SoFi is giving new active invest users up to $1,000 in stock for a limited time, and all it takes is a $50 deposit to get started. See for yourself (Sponsor)
This post may contain links from our sponsors and affiliates, and Flywheel Publishing may receive compensation for actions taken through them.
What $1,000 in Bitcoin, Ethereum, And XRP Five Years Ago Is Worth Today

© Volodymyr Maksymchuk / Shutterstock.com

Five years ago, splitting $1,000 evenly across Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC), Ethereum (CRYPTO: ETH), and XRP (CRYPTO: XRP) seemed like a smart way to play the crypto market. Rather than betting everything on a single asset, you spread the risk across the three biggest names in the space.

What happened to that $1,000 over the next five years, through bull runs, a landmark lawsuit, market crashes, and institutional shifts, is worth walking through carefully before you consider investing for the next five years. 

Bitcoin’s Big Run That Changed Everything

Crypto currency bitcoin and ethereum market on tablet with stock graph

Zoran Pucarevic / Shutterstock.com

If you bought $333 worth of Bitcoin at around $34,616 in late May 2021, you’d have picked a rough time to enter. Bitcoin had already hit $63,000 just weeks before, only to reverse course on Tesla pulling its payments support and China cracking down on miners, sending the price into a steep slide. It was good timing in hindsight, but nothing about it felt that way at the time.

The rest of the crypto market mostly watched Bitcoin crash through 2022, falling under $16,000 after the FTX exchange implosion spooked investor confidence across the entire industry. The $333 position was worth roughly $154 at the worst point.

However, in January 2024, when spot Bitcoin ETFs were approved and institutional money flowed in, things changed. A fourth halving in April 2024 tightened supply just as demand rebounded. Those two catalysts helped Bitcoin break through $100,000 for the first time in December 2024, and it later hit a new all-time high above $126,000 in October 2025.

That $333 investment, measured from the May 2021 entry, would have grown to around $707 today with Bitcoin trading near $73,500, a return of roughly 112%. But it required enduring a brutal 18-month bear market before that recovery came.

Ethereum’s Round Trip Through New Highs and Back

Ethereum coin held in the hand of a trader monitoring the market with his laptop and smartphone

Media Lens King / Shutterstock.com

Ethereum had the strongest narrative behind it when you opened the position. The $333 capital picked up ETH at around $2,407 in late May 2021, in the middle of a pullback from the spring highs. 

The DeFi boom, the NFT explosion, and the initial excitement of the Proof-of-Stake (PoS) transition had created real momentum behind the crypto, sending ETH to a then-all-time high of nearly $4,878 in November 2021 and turning that $333 into roughly $675.

The crash that followed was a bad one. The Ethereum price dropped to about $880 by summer 2022 amid the Terra collapse and FTX implosion, erasing most of its 2021 gains. That September, the long-awaited Merge was completed, transitioning Ethereum to proof-of-stake in one of the biggest technical upgrades in blockchain history, but the bears weren’t done yet, and ETH kept falling in the short term.

Then, the SEC approval of spot Ethereum ETFs in mid-2024 opened the door to traditional capital, and by August 2025, ETH was trading at a new all-time high near $4,952, finally clearing its 2021 record almost four years later. 

The coin has given back most of those gains since then and now trades around $2,012, meaning the initial $333 is worth about $278. That’s a loss of roughly 17% over five years.

XRP’s Road From Lawsuit to Rally and Back

Hands of male trader holding Ripple XRP cryptocurrency token, investing in stock market to exchange it while trading using pc from home. Selective focus

BAZA Production / Shutterstock.com

When you bought XRP at about $0.88 in late May 2021, the token was already in legal trouble. The SEC sued Ripple Labs in December 2020 for selling XRP as an unregistered security, a case that triggered widespread delistings by U.S. exchanges and kept the crypto stagnant for almost three years, missing every meaningful rally in that time.

The first major turning point came in July 2023 when a federal judge ruled that the sale of XRP on public exchanges was not a securities transaction. That ruling opened the door, but what smashed through it was Trump’s election win in November 2024, which reset the regulatory tone. XRP surged past $2 for the first time since 2018, eventually reaching $3.65 by July 2025 before the SEC formally settled its case against Ripple.

That peak was unsustainable, and the bears jumped on it when the buying pressure went away. From its July 2025 peak, XRP has since fallen over 63% and now trades at around $1.32, meaning the initial $333 is worth around $500. That works out to a gain of about 50%, a result most investors would take, even after accepting the kind of drawdown XRP put them through to get there.

Your $1,000 Is Worth About $1,485 Today

A blue digital screen displays a list of cryptocurrency names in white text, including Zcash, Ripple, Bitcoin, and Ethereum. The background features a faint world map with grid lines. On the right, green upward-pointing and red downward-pointing triangular arrows are visible, indicating market trends.

D-Keine / Getty Images

Bitcoin’s run more than doubled its slice of the portfolio, XRP delivered a steady gain through extraordinary turbulence, and Ethereum quietly became the only loser of the three despite reaching a new all-time high along the way.

Coin Entry (May 29, 2021) Amount Bought Price Today (May 29, 2026) Value Today
BTC $34,616 0.00962 BTC $73,497 $707
ETH $2,407 0.1383 ETH $2,012 $278
XRP $0.88 378.4 XRP $1.32 $500
Total Invested $999 $1,485

A 49% return in five years sounds good until you do the arithmetic. That works out to roughly 8% annually, just a bit better than what a basic S&P 500 index fund has historically delivered. And at the peak of the 2025 bull run, that same $1,000 was worth well over $3,000. So where it ends up today feels less like a win than a letdown.

Would the Same Bet Work If You Made It Now?

The conditions today are way different from May 2021. Spot Bitcoin ETFs, regulated XRP products, and improved regulatory clarity have made the market more structured, but that same maturity means the explosive early gains are harder to replicate. The biggest returns came when institutional infrastructure barely existed.

What the last five years make clear is that entry point matters more than asset selection. All three cryptos had the fundamentals to deliver strong returns, but buying near a peak turned a potentially strong portfolio into a flat one. The cost of getting the timing wrong hasn’t changed.

Photo of Sam Daodu
About the Author Sam Daodu →

Sam Daodu is a crypto analyst who's spent nearly a decade making blockchain understandable—no easy task when most whitepapers read like fever dreams. He writes for 24/7 Wall St., covering Bitcoin, altcoins, and crypto market analysis for investors. Before crypto, he was a tech writer (back when explaining "the cloud" was peak innovation). Since 2018, he's written for CoinTelegraph, Yahoo Finance, The Block, Cryptonews, Zypto, Rain, and more—basically anywhere people want crypto news without the headache. Sam runs MacLabs Marketing, a content agency for crypto brands tired of sounding like AI wrote their website. He also publishes free crypto education on his site for Web3 enthusiasts who think "gas fees" is a typo. When he's not writing or staring at charts, Sam's either: - Watching anime (currently convinced One Piece has better tokenomics than most altcoins) - At the gym sculpting himself into a Greek god - Listening to the music your mum warned you only bad boys listen to Connect: LinkedIn | Email | MacLabs Marketing

Continue Reading

Top Gaining Stocks

KMX Vol: 7,330,419
GLW Vol: 22,800,969
INTC Vol: 233,719,006
SMCI Vol: 68,465,534
ENPH Vol: 13,978,376

Top Losing Stocks

ACN Vol: 41,744,333
EPAM Vol: 5,636,587
CTSH Vol: 61,311,400
CTRA Vol: 73,319,495
KR Vol: 26,704,230