- Bitcoin Pizza Day marks the first real-world BTC transaction on May 22, 2010
- Laszlo Hanyecz famously spent 10,000 BTC on two pizzas worth about $40 at the time
- Today, those same 10,000 BTC would be worth more than $771 million
Sixteen years after the first Bitcoin purchase changed crypto history forever, the industry is once again celebrating Bitcoin Pizza Day. On May 22, 2010, software developer Laszlo Hanyecz paid 10,000 BTC for two pizzas in what became the first widely recognized real-world Bitcoin transaction.

At the time, the purchase was worth roughly $40. Today, that same 10,000 BTC would be valued at more than $771 million based on current Bitcoin prices near $77,000. At Bitcoin’s all-time high above $126,000, the value briefly surpassed $1.26 billion.
The Transaction That Made Bitcoin Real
Hanyecz was already deeply involved in Bitcoin’s early development, contributing the first MacOS client and helping pioneer GPU mining. But his pizza purchase became legendary because it proved Bitcoin could function as something more than a niche internet experiment.
Years later, Hanyecz said the transaction made Bitcoin “real” for him because it demonstrated that the currency could actually be used in everyday life. That simple exchange helped transform Bitcoin from a theoretical protocol into a functioning economic system.
Bitcoin Has Come a Long Way Since Pizza
Back in 2010, one Bitcoin traded for roughly $0.004. Very few people could have imagined the asset would eventually become one of the world’s most discussed financial instruments. Since then, Bitcoin has been used to purchase homes, cars, luxury goods, and increasingly, institutional investment products.
The evolution reflects how crypto gradually moved from internet subculture into mainstream finance over the last decade. What started with two pizzas now includes ETFs, treasury reserves, and global payment infrastructure.

Bitcoin’s Origins Still Matter
Bitcoin itself officially began in 2008 when the bitcoin.org domain was registered and Satoshi Nakamoto published the whitepaper titled “Bitcoin: A Peer-to-Peer Electronic Cash System.” The network launched on January 3, 2009, with the mining of the Genesis block and creation of the first 50 BTC.
Pizza Day remains one of crypto’s most symbolic milestones because it captured the exact moment Bitcoin stopped being just code and started becoming money people could actually use.











