Key Takeaways
- Google’s research indicates Bitcoin encryption could be broken with under 500,000 qubits, substantially lower than prior projections
- New attack methodologies require merely 1,200–1,450 high-grade qubits
- Quantum attackers could intercept Bitcoin transactions within approximately 9 minutes
- The Taproot upgrade exposes public keys by default, expanding vulnerability
- Approximately 6.9 million Bitcoin currently exist in wallets with publicly visible keys
Google’s Quantum AI division released a whitepaper this week revealing that compromising Bitcoin’s cryptographic security could prove significantly more achievable than prevailing expert consensus suggested. The computational resources necessary appear far smaller than figures cited in recent assessments.
The research team determined that defeating the cryptographic protections safeguarding Bitcoin and Ethereum wallets might demand fewer than 500,000 physical qubits. Earlier projections placed requirements in the multi-million range.
Two potential assault vectors emerged from the team’s work. Both approaches demand approximately 1,200 to 1,450 superior-quality qubits. This represents a dramatically smaller threshold compared to previous scientific estimates.
Qubits serve as fundamental units within quantum computing systems. These advanced machines excel at resolving particular computational challenges exponentially faster than conventional computers, including decrypting the security mechanisms protecting cryptocurrency wallets.
Google identified 2029 as a potential breakthrough year for practical quantum computing applications. The latest findings indicate the technological distance between current capabilities and functional attacks may be narrower than widespread assumptions.
The research paper outlines real-time attack scenarios. During Bitcoin transactions, a data element known as the public key becomes temporarily visible across the network.
Quantum computing systems could exploit this exposed public key to derive the corresponding private key and reroute the cryptocurrency. According to Google’s framework, significant portions of the calculation can be executed beforehand.
The concluding phase could finish within approximately nine minutes after transaction broadcast. Bitcoin transactions generally achieve confirmation in roughly 10 minutes.
The Confirmation Window Challenge
This tight timeframe provides quantum attackers with roughly a 41% probability of outpacing the legitimate transaction. Alternative cryptocurrencies like Ethereum may demonstrate greater resilience due to faster confirmation mechanisms.
Google’s researchers highlighted Bitcoin’s Taproot enhancement, implemented in 2021, as an element potentially amplifying vulnerability. Taproot delivered privacy improvements and operational efficiency while making public keys openly visible.
Previous Bitcoin address structures incorporated additional security layers that concealed public keys until transaction execution. Taproot eliminated this safeguard for wallets adopting the updated format.
Existing Bitcoin Exposure
The research paper calculates approximately 6.9 million Bitcoin currently reside in wallets featuring exposed public keys. This represents roughly one-third of total circulating supply.
About 1.7 million of these Bitcoin originate from the blockchain’s earliest operational period. The remaining portion stems from address reuse practices and Taproot-enabled wallets.
This calculation substantially exceeds a recent CoinShares analysis, which identified only approximately 10,200 Bitcoin concentrated sufficiently to generate market disruptions if compromised.
Google modified its publication approach for these findings. Rather than disclosing complete methodological details, the research team employed zero-knowledge proof techniques to validate results while withholding full procedural information.
Google emphasizes that quantum-based cryptocurrency attacks remain beyond current technological capability, while advocating for accelerated transition to post-quantum cryptographic security frameworks.

