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What are altcoins? How to understand every crypto that is not Bitcoin

Altcoin means alternative coin. In normal crypto language, it means any cryptocurrency that is not Bitcoin. That includes serious networks like Ethereum and Solana, stablecoins, exchange tokens, governance tokens, meme coins, and tiny projects with almost no users. The word is simple; the category is messy.

TL;DR

Altcoins are all crypto assets other than Bitcoin. Some try to improve speed, fees, privacy, programmability, or payments. Many fail. Beginners should separate large, useful networks from hype-driven tokens and always check liquidity, supply, team, use case, and risk before buying.

Altcoin means everything outside Bitcoin

Bitcoin came first, so every later crypto asset was described as an alternative. That is where "altcoin" comes from. The label does not tell you whether a project is good, bad, useful, risky, or real. It only tells you it is not Bitcoin.

Ethereum is technically an altcoin. So is Solana. So are meme coins with no product. That is why the term is too broad to use as an investment category. You need to look deeper.

The main types of altcoins

  • Smart-contract platforms: Networks such as Ethereum and Solana where developers build apps.
  • Stablecoins: Tokens designed to track a currency such as the US dollar.
  • Exchange tokens: Tokens linked to trading platforms or ecosystems.
  • Governance tokens: Tokens used to vote on protocol decisions.
  • Meme coins: Community-driven assets where attention is often the main product.
  • Privacy coins: Assets focused on hiding transaction details.

Some altcoins are coins on their own blockchains. Others are tokens built on another chain. Read coins vs tokens for that distinction.

Why altcoins exist

Altcoins exist because Bitcoin intentionally does a narrow job. It is slow-moving, conservative, and focused on scarce digital money. Other projects try different trade-offs: faster transactions, lower fees, programmable contracts, privacy, staking, app platforms, games, or payments.

That experimentation is useful. It is also noisy. Open crypto networks make it easy to launch a token, which means the market includes serious engineering, honest experiments, copycats, scams, and jokes all at once.

How to evaluate an altcoin without getting swept up

Before buying an altcoin, ask boring questions. What does it do? Who uses it? How many tokens exist now, and how many can unlock later? Is the trading volume real? Can you explain why the token itself needs to exist?

Altcoins can rise faster than Bitcoin because they are smaller. They can also fall harder because liquidity is thinner and narratives change quickly. Many altcoins that looked important in previous cycles never recovered their old highs.

  • Check market cap and volume, not only price.
  • Read token supply and unlock schedules.
  • Look for real users, not just social media activity.
  • Avoid leverage, especially on small assets.
  • Assume high risk until proven otherwise.

FAQ

Is Ethereum an altcoin?

Yes. In the broadest definition, every cryptocurrency other than Bitcoin is an altcoin. But Ethereum is also a major smart-contract network, so calling it only an altcoin can be too vague.

Are altcoins riskier than Bitcoin?

Usually, yes. Large altcoins can be liquid and important, but the category includes many small projects with weak liquidity, short histories, and high failure rates.

Can an altcoin become bigger than Bitcoin?

It is possible in theory, but Bitcoin has the strongest brand, longest history, and deepest liquidity in crypto. Any altcoin trying to overtake it would need a very strong reason and sustained real-world demand.