Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong has flagged quantum computing as a risk that the Bitcoin network should begin preparing for now, even as he maintains the threat is not yet existential. His comments, paired with Coinbase’s launch of a dedicated quantum advisory board, signal that one of the largest U.S. crypto exchanges views early action as essential to protecting the roughly $1.34 trillion Bitcoin network.
What Armstrong and Coinbase Have Actually Said
A March 25, 2026 Benzinga report tied Armstrong’s public comments to a clip from his March 18 interview with Norges Bank Investment Management CEO Nicolai Tangen. Armstrong framed quantum computing as requiring “diligent effort” but stopped short of calling it an existential crisis for Bitcoin.
According to unconfirmed reports, the original social media post used stronger language suggesting the risk “must be addressed soon.” That exact phrasing was not verified from any first-party March 2026 source in available reporting.
What is documented is concrete institutional preparation. Coinbase announced on January 21, 2026 the creation of an independent advisory board on quantum computing and blockchain. The board includes cryptographers and researchers such as Scott Aaronson, Dan Boneh, Justin Drake, Sreeram Kannan, Yehuda Lindell, and Dahlia Malkhi.
The advisory board will publish position papers, issue recommendations, and respond in real time to major quantum breakthroughs. That structure suggests Coinbase sees the timeline as long enough for deliberate planning but short enough to warrant dedicated resources now.
Bitcoin traded at $66,963 at press time, down 0.23% over 24 hours, with the broader market operating in an environment of extreme fear according to sentiment indicators.
Why Quantum Computing Threatens Bitcoin’s Cryptography
Bitcoin and most major blockchains rely on elliptic-curve cryptography (ECC) to secure transactions. In simple terms, ECC generates pairs of keys: a private key that only the owner knows and a public key derived from it. The math that links them is easy to compute in one direction but practically impossible to reverse with today’s computers.
A sufficiently powerful quantum computer could change that equation. Coinbase’s own January 2025 security explainer noted that large-scale quantum machines could eventually weaken or break the ECC algorithms that underpin Bitcoin and Ethereum.
The vulnerability is not uniform across all Bitcoin holdings. Exposed public keys, those that have been broadcast to the network through prior transactions, represent the relevant attack surface. Addresses that have never sent a transaction keep their public key hidden behind an additional hash layer, offering a degree of protection even in a post-quantum scenario.
No quantum computer today is close to breaking Bitcoin’s cryptography. The threat is tied to future large-scale quantum capability, not the current state of the network. But the gap between “no risk today” and “risk tomorrow” is precisely what Armstrong and others argue should be filled with preparation, not complacency.
Bitcoin’s network currently processes roughly 443,853 daily transactions across a hash rate of about 877 EH/s, underscoring the scale of infrastructure that would eventually need to transition to quantum-resistant standards. Meanwhile, Q1 2026 crypto trading volume reached $20.57 trillion, a reminder of how much economic activity depends on the security assumptions these networks provide.
24-hour Bitcoin trading volume sat at roughly $22.51 billion at fetch time.
What a Bitcoin Quantum Upgrade Could Require
Upgrading Bitcoin’s cryptographic foundations is not something Coinbase or any single company can decide. Bitcoin protocol changes require broad consensus among miners, node operators, developers, and the wider community, a process that historically takes years of discussion, testing, and coordination.
Casa CSO Jameson Lopp has written extensively on the topic. In a March 2025 analysis, he argued the issue is manageable but should not be deferred.
“I think it’s far from a crisis, but given the difficulty in changing Bitcoin it’s worth starting to seriously discuss.”
Jameson Lopp, Casa CSO
Lopp’s point highlights a core tension: the very decentralization that makes Bitcoin resilient also makes it slow to upgrade. Waiting until a quantum threat is imminent could leave too little time to coordinate a safe migration.
The likely technical direction involves post-quantum cryptography (PQC) algorithms. NIST has already published standards for PQC that could eventually replace ECC in blockchain applications. The transition would involve multiple stages: new address formats, wallet software updates, and ultimately consensus-level protocol changes.
For Bitcoin holders, the practical implication is address hygiene. Users who hold large BTC positions should already follow best practices like avoiding address reuse, which limits public key exposure. Those steps provide marginal protection while the broader ecosystem works toward longer-term solutions.
Coinbase’s advisory board represents one piece of a larger preparedness effort. Armstrong’s framing, that quantum risk needs diligent effort rather than panic, aligns with the consensus view among cryptographers that the window for action is measured in years, not months. The question is whether Bitcoin’s governance structure can move fast enough to use that window effectively, particularly as compliance and security standards across the crypto industry continue to tighten.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.





