45% Of Young Investors Own Crypto As Housing Dreams Fade: Survey
- Nearly half of younger US investors now hold crypto as traditional wealth-building paths grow increasingly out of reach, according to new data from Coinbase.
- This perception translates directly into portfolio decisions.
- The strategy reflects deliberate pursuit of tools and markets that might help close generational wealth gaps rather than passive investment approaches.
- The crypto allocation isn’t treated as speculative positioning but as a central strategy.
What Happened
Nearly half of younger US investors now hold crypto as traditional wealth-building paths grow increasingly out of reach, according to new data from Coinbase.
The findings show that 45% of younger investors already own crypto, compared to just 18% of older generations, and that three-quarters believe their generation faces harder odds of building wealth through conventional means than previous cohorts did.
The State of Crypto Q4 2025 report, compiled from a survey of 4,350 US adults, including 2,005 active investors, found younger generations allocating 25% of their portfolios to non-traditional assets, triple the 8% allocation among older investors.
Beyond the allocation gap, younger investors demonstrate markedly different attitudes toward digital assets, with four in five viewing crypto as creating financial opportunities that wouldn’t otherwise exist for their generation.
Despite reporting greater optimism about broader economic conditions, younger investors don’t believe traditional wealth-building mechanisms work in their favor.
This perception translates directly into portfolio decisions. While stock ownership rates remain similar across age groups, younger investors add substantially more alternative exposure, actively seeking reward mechanisms beyond conventional stock dividends.
The strategy reflects deliberate pursuit of tools and markets that might help close generational wealth gaps rather than passive investment approaches.
The crypto allocation isn’t treated as speculative positioning but as a central strategy. Nearly half of younger investors (47%) want access to new crypto assets before general market availability, compared with just 16% of older investors.
Four in five younger adults believe cryptocurrency will play a significantly larger role in future financial systems, dropping to three in five among older investors.
Four in five younger investors say they’re willing to try new investment opportunities before others, compared with under half of older adults.
This pattern marks a clear departure from recent data showing cooling crypto enthusiasm across broader investor populations.
A December FINRA Foundation study found crypto consideration among US investors dropped from 33% to 26% between 2021 and 2024, while those viewing digital assets as extremely or very risky rose from 58% to 66%.
Younger investors trade more frequently, take more calculated risks to chase higher returns, and push platforms toward always-on operations that support a wider asset range.
Notably, social media “finfluencers” now guide investment decisions for 61% of investors under 35, with YouTube serving as the dominant platform, and word-of-mouth from friends and family surpassing financial professional recommendations.
The Infrastructure for a New Investment Generation
The shift toward non-traditional assets among younger investors aligns with separate findings showing institutional adoption bolstering confidence.
Market Context
Interest spans crypto derivatives, prediction markets, round-the-clock stock trading, early-stage token sales, altcoins, and decentralized finance lending products.
The generational divide extends to trading behavior and information sourcing.
Why It Matters
Risk Appetite Extends Beyond Bitcoin and Ethereum
Details
A Generation Betting Against the Old Playbook
The cohort has watched housing affordability deteriorate while student debt mounted and wage growth lagged, driving 73% to conclude that their generation faces steeper wealth-building challenges than 57% of older adults.
The willingness to embrace emerging opportunities doesn’t stop at spot crypto holdings.
Yet that pullback appears concentrated among older demographics rather than the younger cohort driving current adoption.
A November Zerohash survey found that 35% of wealthy young Americans had already moved money away from advisers who did not offer crypto exposure, with more than four-fifths reporting increased confidence as major institutions like BlackRock, Fidelity, and Morgan Stanley embraced digital assets.