How much of your money should be in crypto? It’s the most common question new investors ask — and the answer determines whether you sleep well at night or stress about every price move.
The answer most experienced investors land on: 10% of your investable net worth.
Why 10%?
The 10% rule is based on a simple observation: at 10% allocation, crypto has enough weight to meaningfully impact your portfolio if it goes up, but not enough to destroy your finances if it goes to zero.
If Crypto Goes Up 10x
A 10% allocation × 10x = your crypto is now worth your entire original portfolio. Life-changing gains — but you still had 90% in safer assets.
If Crypto Goes to Zero
You lose 10% of your portfolio. Painful, but survivable. You don’t lose your house, your retirement, or your ability to meet financial obligations.
If Crypto Does Nothing
A 10% allocation in a stable market is manageable. You’re not overexposed, and you’re not underexposed.
How the 10% Rule Works
Step 1: Calculate Your Investable Net Worth
This is the amount of money you could invest without affecting your daily life:
Total net worth - Emergency fund (3-6 months expenses) - Short-term savings (next 2 years) = Investable net worth
Example:
- Total savings: $100,000
- Emergency fund: -$20,000
- Short-term savings: -$30,000
- Investable net worth: $50,000
- 10% crypto allocation: $5,000
Step 2: Allocate Within Crypto
Once you know your total crypto allocation (10% of investable net worth), split it across different risk levels:
| Risk Level | Allocation | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Core (low risk) | 60-70% | Bitcoin, Ethereum |
| Growth (medium risk) | 20-30% | Solana, Arbitrum, Chainlink |
| Speculative (high risk) | 5-10% | Early-stage alts, meme coins |
Example with $5,000 total crypto allocation:
- Core (65%): $3,250 in BTC and ETH
- Growth (25%): $1,250 in SOL, ARB, LINK
- Speculative (10%): $500 for early-stage bets
Step 3: Rebalance Annually
Once per year (or when your allocation drifts significantly), rebalance back to 10%.
Example: If crypto goes up 3x and your portfolio goes from $50K to $65K (10% = $5K becomes $15K out of $65K, which is 23%), sell crypto to bring it back to 10% ($6,500).
This forces you to sell high and buy low — automatically.
Should You Go Higher?
Some investors argue for higher allocations:
- 20-30% — If you’re young (20-30 years old) with high risk tolerance and decades of earning ahead
- 50%+ — If you deeply understand crypto and believe it will outperform everything else for the next decade
- 100% — If you’ve done the research and accept the risk (not recommended for most people)
Higher allocations come with higher risk. A 50% allocation that drops 80% means your total portfolio drops 40%. For most people, that’s emotionally and financially devastating.
Should You Go Lower?
Some investors should have lower allocations:
- 1-5% — If you’re nearing retirement and can’t afford volatility
- 0% — If crypto keeps you up at night or you can’t afford to lose the money
The 10% Rule for Different Life Stages
| Stage | Allocation | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| 20s, high income | 15-20% | Long time horizon, can recover from losses |
| 30s, building wealth | 10-15% | Balanced growth with stability |
| 40s, peak earnings | 5-10% | Preserving wealth while still growing |
| 50s, near retirement | 3-5% | Capital preservation |
| Retired | 0-3% | Income-focused, low volatility |
Common Mistakes
Going All In During a Bull Market
The most dangerous time to increase your allocation is when prices are at all-time highs. This is when you’re most excited about crypto — and when the risk is highest.
Fix: Increase your allocation during bear markets when prices are low and sentiment is negative.
Ignoring Your Other Financial Obligations
Your 10% crypto allocation should come after:
- Emergency fund (3-6 months of expenses)
- High-interest debt paid off (credit cards, personal loans)
- Retirement contributions (401k, IRA) up to employer match
- Short-term savings goals (house down payment, education)
Crypto is an investment, not a savings account.
Not Rebalancing
If you let your 10% allocation grow to 30% without rebalancing, your risk profile has changed dramatically. You’re now heavily exposed to crypto — whether you intended it or not.
A Sample Portfolio
| Asset | Allocation |
|---|---|
| Stocks (index funds) | 50% |
| Bonds | 15% |
| Real estate | 15% |
| Cash / emergency fund | 10% |
| Crypto (core: BTC/ETH) | 7% |
| Crypto (growth) | 2% |
| Crypto (speculative) | 1% |
This is a balanced portfolio for someone in their 30s with moderate risk tolerance. Your personal situation will differ.
Verdict
The 10% rule is a simple, effective framework for crypto portfolio allocation. It gives you enough exposure to benefit from crypto’s upside while protecting you from catastrophic losses.
Start with 10% of your investable net worth. Allocate within crypto by risk level. Rebalance annually. And never invest more than you can afford to lose.
Related: Taking Profits: How to Pull Out Capital Safely | Why You Shouldn’t FOMO Into the Next Big Coin | The Psychology of a HODLer | Best Cryptocurrencies for Beginners
Portfolio allocation is a frequent topic on BitcoinTalk’s Investing board. Experienced members share their allocation strategies and discuss risk management. The consensus: 5-15% is the sweet spot for most investors, with higher allocations reserved for those who deeply understand the space.