Once you understand why to own Bitcoin, the next question is how. There are dozens of platforms; most are designed to extract fees, push altcoins, or both. These three are the ones I actually use and recommend. Each has a different sweet spot — pick the one that matches your situation.
Different audiences. Different strengths. Same end goal: getting Bitcoin into your wallet without getting ripped off along the way.
The easiest way for a friend or family member who has never touched crypto to get their first Bitcoin. Slick app, instant linking to a US bank, FDIC-insured cash balances, and a publicly traded parent company that has to comply with US securities law. You give up some self-custody and pay slightly higher fees in exchange for the smoothest first-time experience.
A bitcoin-only company built by people who understand and believe in Bitcoin as money — no shitcoins, no NFTs, no distractions. Lightning-enabled, transparent fee structure, full-reserve (every dollar of customer BTC is fully backed and verifiable), and one of the cleanest interfaces in the industry. This is where I would put a long-term DCA plan that's meant to run for years.
Built by Bitcoiners for Bitcoiners. The pitch is simple: cheapest way to buy and move Bitcoin in the world right now. Uses the Lightning Network to settle instantly with near-zero fees. Also lets you receive your paycheck partially or entirely in Bitcoin via direct deposit, send dollars instantly to anyone in the world, and pay anywhere Bitcoin is accepted.
Honestly? You can't go wrong with any of them. If I had to give one-line advice for each kind of person:
→ Coinbase. Sign up, link bank, set a recurring weekly buy of an amount you won't miss. Don't open the app every day.
→ River. Bitcoin-only platform with proof of reserves and zero-fee DCA. Withdraw to cold storage every quarter.
→ Strike. Lightning-first, cheap to move, lets you live partially on Bitcoin rails today.
→ Pretty reasonable answer. Each has different strengths and there's no penalty for spreading risk across multiple custodians while you're still learning.
Every platform on this page is a custodian — meaning they technically hold the keys to your Bitcoin until you withdraw it. Exchanges have collapsed before (FTX, Mt. Gox, Celsius, BlockFi, Voyager) and customer funds were lost. The platforms above are far better-run than those failures, but the rule still applies: buy on an exchange, but don't store on an exchange.
Once you have meaningful BTC, withdraw it to a hardware wallet (Coldcard, Trezor, Ledger) that only you control. Write the seed phrase down on paper or steel. Store it somewhere fireproof and waterproof. This is the only step that actually completes your purchase. Until you self-custody, you've bought an IOU, not Bitcoin.
I won't tell you a number. I'll tell you the principles:
Spot Bitcoin held for years has never lost money for any holder.