Bitnodes estimates the relative size of the Bitcoin peer-to-peer network by finding all of its reachable nodes.


Global Bitcoin nodes by country

158 countries with their respective number of global IPv4/IPv6 Bitcoin nodes as of Thu Apr 3 20:00:00 2025 EDT.

Window size: 7-day

NODES115263
COUNTRIES158
CITIES8669
ASNS2681
SERVICES6
PORT NUMBERS329

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RANKCOUNTRYNODES
26Korea (the Republic of)
633 (0.64%)
27Belgium
618 (0.63%)
28Ireland
522 (0.53%)
29Ukraine
512 (0.52%)
30Norway
458 (0.46%)
31Argentina
448 (0.45%)
32Greece
442 (0.45%)
33Hungary
430 (0.43%)
34Romania
425 (0.43%)
35South Africa
408 (0.41%)
36Indonesia
376 (0.38%)
37Taiwan
369 (0.37%)
38United Arab Emirates
366 (0.37%)
39New Zealand
341 (0.34%)
40Israel
324 (0.33%)
41Malaysia
300 (0.30%)
42Bulgaria
250 (0.25%)
43Vietnam
239 (0.24%)
44Lebanon
209 (0.21%)
45Uruguay
206 (0.21%)
46Croatia
204 (0.21%)
47Iran (Islamic Republic of)
200 (0.20%)
48Slovakia
199 (0.20%)
49Denmark
171 (0.17%)
50Saudi Arabia
169 (0.17%)

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This page reports the estimated size of the Bitcoin peer-to-peer network including both reachable and unreachable nodes, i.e. global nodes. Unlike the low churn rate estimation method for reachable nodes (see the latest snapshot here), the method for this report can only provide a rough estimation and does not filter out potentially spurious nodes that may be gossiped by non-standard/spam/malicious peers.

Bitnodes crawler captures these nodes from the addr messages returned by all the reachable nodes. Each snapshot or data point in this report represents a rolling window. A snapshot with window size of 1 day will include all nodes by IP addresses with timestamps less than 1 day old. The timestamp for a node here refers to the time when its peer last connects to it. If you turn on your Bitcoin node for only a few minutes anytime during the last 24 hours, it will be included in the latest snapshot with a window size of 1 day.

Multiple nodes from the same IP address, but different port numbers are counted as one node in this report. A larger window size may increase the likelihood of the same node being counted more than once due to e.g. IP lease renewal.

A Bitcoin node may be unreachable for several reasons. It may be configured by the operator to only attempt to make outgoing connections or it may be located behind corporate/ISP firewalls or NAT. A node could also become temporarily unreachable if it has hit its maximum allowed connections or if it is in the process of syncing up to the latest blocks. As it is impossible to connect to an unreachable node directly, we cannot reliably confirm the true existence of an unreachable node, hence the rough estimation.


Join the Network

Be part of the Bitcoin network by running a Bitcoin full node, e.g. Bitcoin Core.

Use this tool to check if your Bitcoin client is currently accepting incoming connections from other nodes. Port must be between 1024 and 65535.