• $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

  • $

    Loading

    미국 달러

Bitcoin Inscriptions: What They Are and Why They Matter

앤드류 캠스

2026. 1. 22.

읽기 시간

9 mins

공유하기

오디오로 듣기

0:00/1:34

Bitcoin vs Litecoin in 2026: Which Is Better for Payments and Value Storage
Bitcoin vs Litecoin in 2026: Which Is Better for Payments and Value Storage
Bitcoin vs Litecoin in 2026: Which Is Better for Payments and Value Storage
Bitcoin vs Litecoin in 2026: Which Is Better for Payments and Value Storage

빠른 요약

  • Bitcoin inscriptions embed images text code and other data directly into transaction witness space

  • Ordinals protocol and SegWit upgrades let individual satoshis carry uniquely assigned onchain content

  • Text and code form most inscriptions images are second while other formats create a tail

  • Inscriptions increase blockchain size and node costs while sparking debate over utility security and centralization

빠른 요약

  • Bitcoin inscriptions embed images text code and other data directly into transaction witness space

  • Ordinals protocol and SegWit upgrades let individual satoshis carry uniquely assigned onchain content

  • Text and code form most inscriptions images are second while other formats create a tail

  • Inscriptions increase blockchain size and node costs while sparking debate over utility security and centralization

Bitcoin can be understood as a ledger book. Traditionally, this book only recorded financial transactions on who sent how many bitcoins to whom. 

What Are Bitcoin Inscriptions?

Starting in 2023, people discovered that Bitcoin’s blockchain could be used for more than recording payments. In addition to transactions, it became possible to embed other types of data directly into Bitcoin’s history, images, text, code, and even small programs. These embedded pieces of data are called inscriptions.

At a high level, Bitcoin can be understood as a ledger book. Traditionally, that ledger only recorded entries like “Alice paid Bob 0.5 BTC.” Inscriptions extend this idea by allowing other data to be written into the ledger alongside financial transactions.

How Inscriptions Work

Bitcoin is made up of tiny units called satoshis (100 million satoshis equal 1 bitcoin). The Ordinals Protocol assigns a unique number to each satoshi, similar to giving every grain of sand its own serial number.

Using a feature introduced by SegWit, data can be placed into a transaction’s witness data section. When a transaction assigns a specific satoshi, that data becomes associated with it. This is what allows content to be embedded directly on Bitcoin’s blockchain.

The result is that a satoshi can carry more than just monetary value—it can also carry data that becomes permanently recorded in Bitcoin’s history.

A Brief History of Inscriptions

This idea isn’t entirely new. In 2011, developers embedded an ASCII art tribute to cryptographer Len Sassaman into the Bitcoin blockchain.

What changed in 2023 was scale and accessibility. With the introduction of the Ordinals protocol, people could reliably and systematically attach data to individual satoshis using witness data. This led to a rapid increase in inscriptions of many different types.

Ordinals - Inscriptions (overtime) | Source: Dune

What Actually Got Inscribed 

As the chart below illustrates, Bitcoin inscriptions were used for a much wider range of data than images alone, with text-based content forming the majority.

  • Text and code (just over 50%): Plain text messages, program code, HTML, JavaScript, and JSON data used by BRC-20 tokens accounted for the largest share of inscriptions.

  • Images (roughly 40%): JPEGs, PNGs, GIFs, and SVG files made up the second-largest category. Despite common assumptions, images were not the dominant use case.

  • All other formats: A long tail of inscriptions included audio files, video files, 3D models, PDFs, and other specialized data types.

Taken together, this distribution shows that inscriptions functioned less as a single-purpose NFT phenomenon and more as a general mechanism for embedding arbitrary data into Bitcoin’s blockchain.

Inscriptions by Type | Source: Dune

How Non-Technical Users Joined In

At peak periods, thousands of inscriptions were created daily. Platforms such as Gamma, Ordinals Bot, Hiro, and Xverse made it possible for users to create inscriptions without running their own Bitcoin node.

How Did Inscriptions Become Possible?

This capability emerged from two Bitcoin upgrades that were designed for other purposes:

  • SegWit (2017): This upgrade separated transaction signatures into a special "witness" section to make transactions more efficient. This witness section can hold more data than previously possible.

  • Ordinals Protocol (2023): Developer Casey Rodarmor created, January 21, 2023, a system to track individual satoshis and attach data to them using SegWit's witness space.

Neither upgrade was designed with inscriptions in mind, but together they made it technically possible to embed arbitrary data directly on Bitcoin's blockchain.

What Does This Mean for Bitcoin?

When you run a Bitcoin node, you're storing and validating the entire blockchain. Here's what inscriptions change:

Blockchain Size

Every inscription makes the blockchain larger. A 440KB image permanently adds 440KB that every full node must store forever.

Chart showing Bitcoin blockchain size growth 2022-2026 | Source Ycharts

Storage Costs

As of early 2026, the Bitcoin blockchain has grown noticeably due to inscriptions. Running a full node requires:

  • More hard drive space (the blockchain is larger)

  • More bandwidth (downloading the entire chain takes longer)

  • More time to sync when you first set up a node

Who Pays?

Here's an important asymmetry:

  • The person creating the inscription: Pays a one-time fee measured in millions of sats, depending on the prevailing fee rate. 

  • Every node operator: Nodes store that data forever at their own expense. Miners are compensated for including inscriptions; node operators are not.

The creator pays once. Node operators collectively bear the ongoing storage cost indefinitely.

Two Competing Views on the Role of Inscriptions

Proponents Argue

  • Expanded utility: Bitcoin continues operating primarily as money, while also serving as an uncensorable medium for digital art and data storage.

  • Broader participation: Inscriptions attract new users, developers, and forms of economic activity to the network.

  • Fee-based security: Transaction fees from inscriptions help secure the network as block subsidies decline over time.

  • Immutability as a feature: Bitcoin’s permanence and resistance to censorship make it a secure place to store important data.

Critics Argue

  • Design intent: Bitcoin was designed primarily as digital cash, not as a general-purpose data storage platform.

  • Blockchain bloat: Inscriptions increase the size of the blockchain, making it more costly and time-consuming to run a full node.

  • Centralization risk: Higher storage and bandwidth requirements may price out smaller node operators, reducing decentralization. To see total nodes over time click here.

  • Fee market distortion: Increased demand for block space can make ordinary payments more expensive and less predictable.

  • Better alternatives exist: Other blockchains are purpose-built for NFTs and data storage and may be better suited for those use cases.

Observed Network Behavior Since the Inscription Boom

When inscriptions first emerged in 2023, critics warned that they would overwhelm Bitcoin’s blockchain and permanently distort the fee market. While inscription activity did spike sharply during the initial boom, the data shows that this surge did not continue indefinitely.

Cumulative Inscriptions | Source: Dune

Inscriptions were widely criticized as a form of spam that could crowd out ordinary transactions. However, the chart above shows that after the initial excitement, “monthly average” inscription activity declined and then stabilized.

This suggests that Bitcoin’s fee market exerted a regulating effect. Inscriptions must compete for block space and require users to pay transaction fees, so sustained high-volume activity becomes costly. 

As a result, speculative or low-value inscriptions appear to have diminished once fees rose.

What This Means for Node Operators

As inscriptions embed non-transactional data directly into Bitcoin’s blockchain, node operators are no longer just validating payments, they are also deciding what kinds of data they are willing to store and relay.

Conclusion

Bitcoin inscriptions expand what can be recorded on Bitcoin’s blockchain. In addition to payments, text, images, and other data can now be permanently embedded into Bitcoin’s history.

Some see this as a useful extension of Bitcoin’s capabilities; others see it as unnecessary strain on a system designed for payments. 

What matters in practice is that inscriptions are limited by the same rules as all Bitcoin activity. Block space is scarce, fees must be paid, and sustained usage is shaped by economic incentives rather than enthusiasm alone.

For anyone running a Bitcoin node, inscriptions make these tradeoffs tangible. Running a node now means choosing whether to store and validate not just transactions, but additional data as well. In that sense, inscriptions don’t just add data to Bitcoin they add a new consideration for its users.

Coinjuice Pro provides deeper analysis of on-chain data, fee dynamics, and Bitcoin network behavior. Subscriptions are available.

자주 묻는 질문

What are Bitcoin inscriptions?

Bitcoin inscriptions are pieces of data—such as images, text, code, and small programs—embedded directly into Bitcoin’s blockchain, so that this information is permanently recorded alongside ordinary payment transactions.

How do Bitcoin inscriptions work on a technical level?

Bitcoin is divided into satoshis, and the Ordinals Protocol assigns each satoshi a unique number. Using SegWit’s witness data section, additional data can be placed into a transaction. When a specific satoshi is assigned in that transaction, the attached data becomes associated with it and is permanently stored on the blockchain.

What kinds of data are most commonly inscribed on Bitcoin?

Text and code make up just over 50% of inscriptions, including plain text, program code, HTML, JavaScript, and JSON used by BRC-20 tokens. Images such as JPEGs, PNGs, GIFs, and SVGs account for roughly 40%. The rest consists of a long tail of formats like audio, video, 3D models, PDFs, and other specialized data types.

How do inscriptions affect Bitcoin’s blockchain and node operators?

Each inscription increases the blockchain’s size—for example, a 440KB image adds 440KB permanently—so running a full node requires more hard drive space, bandwidth, and sync time. The inscription creator pays a one-time transaction fee, but node operators store the data indefinitely at their own expense, while miners are compensated for including inscriptions in blocks.

What are Bitcoin inscriptions?

Bitcoin inscriptions are pieces of data—such as images, text, code, and small programs—embedded directly into Bitcoin’s blockchain, so that this information is permanently recorded alongside ordinary payment transactions.

How do Bitcoin inscriptions work on a technical level?

Bitcoin is divided into satoshis, and the Ordinals Protocol assigns each satoshi a unique number. Using SegWit’s witness data section, additional data can be placed into a transaction. When a specific satoshi is assigned in that transaction, the attached data becomes associated with it and is permanently stored on the blockchain.

What kinds of data are most commonly inscribed on Bitcoin?

Text and code make up just over 50% of inscriptions, including plain text, program code, HTML, JavaScript, and JSON used by BRC-20 tokens. Images such as JPEGs, PNGs, GIFs, and SVGs account for roughly 40%. The rest consists of a long tail of formats like audio, video, 3D models, PDFs, and other specialized data types.

How do inscriptions affect Bitcoin’s blockchain and node operators?

Each inscription increases the blockchain’s size—for example, a 440KB image adds 440KB permanently—so running a full node requires more hard drive space, bandwidth, and sync time. The inscription creator pays a one-time transaction fee, but node operators store the data indefinitely at their own expense, while miners are compensated for including inscriptions in blocks.

What are Bitcoin inscriptions?

Bitcoin inscriptions are pieces of data—such as images, text, code, and small programs—embedded directly into Bitcoin’s blockchain, so that this information is permanently recorded alongside ordinary payment transactions.

How do Bitcoin inscriptions work on a technical level?

Bitcoin is divided into satoshis, and the Ordinals Protocol assigns each satoshi a unique number. Using SegWit’s witness data section, additional data can be placed into a transaction. When a specific satoshi is assigned in that transaction, the attached data becomes associated with it and is permanently stored on the blockchain.

What kinds of data are most commonly inscribed on Bitcoin?

Text and code make up just over 50% of inscriptions, including plain text, program code, HTML, JavaScript, and JSON used by BRC-20 tokens. Images such as JPEGs, PNGs, GIFs, and SVGs account for roughly 40%. The rest consists of a long tail of formats like audio, video, 3D models, PDFs, and other specialized data types.

How do inscriptions affect Bitcoin’s blockchain and node operators?

Each inscription increases the blockchain’s size—for example, a 440KB image adds 440KB permanently—so running a full node requires more hard drive space, bandwidth, and sync time. The inscription creator pays a one-time transaction fee, but node operators store the data indefinitely at their own expense, while miners are compensated for including inscriptions in blocks.

면책 조항

이 글에 제공된 정보는 정보 제공을 위한 것입니다. 이는 금융 자문으로 간주되어서는 안 되며, 금융 자문을 의미하지 않습니다. 우리는 이 정보의 완전성, 신뢰성, 정확성에 대해 어떠한 보증도 하지 않습니다. 모든 투자는 위험을 수반하며 과거의 실적이 미래의 결과를 보장하지 않습니다. 투자 결정을 내리기 전에 금융 자문가와 상담할 것을 권장합니다.

공유하기

작성자

앤드류 캠스

2026. 1. 22.

공유하기

작성자

앤드류 캠스

2026. 1. 22.

당신이 찾던 유일한 전자책

이 전자책은 기본적으로 암호화폐 치트 시트입니다. 첫 거래를 시작하기 위해 알아야 할 모든 것을 담고 있으며, 복잡한 용어 없이 쉽게 이해할 수 있습니다.

당신이 찾던 유일한 전자책

이 전자책은 기본적으로 암호화폐 치트 시트입니다. 첫 거래를 시작하기 위해 알아야 할 모든 것을 담고 있으며, 복잡한 용어 없이 쉽게 이해할 수 있습니다.

당신이 찾던 유일한 전자책

이 전자책은 기본적으로 암호화폐 치트 시트입니다. 첫 거래를 시작하기 위해 알아야 할 모든 것을 담고 있으며, 복잡한 용어 없이 쉽게 이해할 수 있습니다.

당신이 찾던 유일한 전자책

이 전자책은 기본적으로 암호화폐 치트 시트입니다. 첫 거래를 시작하기 위해 알아야 할 모든 것을 담고 있으며, 복잡한 용어 없이 쉽게 이해할 수 있습니다.