Cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds (ETFs), often referred to as crypto ETFs, have evolved from a niche experiment to a central pillar of the digital assets industry.
Since the launch of the first spot Bitcoin ETFs in the United States in early 2024, followed by Ethereum ETFs, crypto ETFs have reshaped the way retail and institutional traders/investors interact with crypto.
By the end of 2025, the crypto ETF landscape includes not only Bitcoin and Ethereum products, but a growing list of altcoin ETFs, each attracting new investors and liquidity to markets that were once considered too volatile or opaque for traditional finance.
From novelty to mainstream: the rise of crypto ETFs
Since their inception, Bitcoin ETFs, led by BlackRock’s iShares Bitcoin Trust (BIBT), have provided regulated exposure to BTC without requiring direct custody, attracting huge inflows and validating crypto’s role in traditional wallets.
Towards the end of 2025, investors had around 12 spot BTC ETFs to choose from, as shown in the screenshot below.
Notably, demand for Spot Bitcoin ETFs has exceeded the daily production of new BTC by miners, driven by strong institutional interest.
According to Joshua Gortez, while miners were producing an average of 450 BTC per day in 2025, Bitcoin ETFs saw 118 million BTC inflows, almost four times the amount of coins mined daily.
This imbalance created a supply squeeze and partly explains why the price of Bitcoin reached its all-time high of $126,198 on October 6, 2025.
The same was the case for Ethereum. By the end of 2025, there were at least 11 Ethereum ETFs, opening regulated access to the second largest cryptocurrency.
Demand for Ethereum ETFs also skyrocketed in 2025, with July and August representing the highest inflows, causing a supply squeeze that propelled Ethereum’s price to an all-time high of $4,953.73 according to CoinMarketCap.
Altcoin ETFs approved in 2025
The success of Bitcoin and Ethereum ETFs has catalyzed a wave of altcoin ETF filings in 2025.
By the end of 2025, the cryptocurrency market had surpassed the first Ethereum and Bitcoin ETFs, as regulators cleared the first round of spot altcoin ETFs that investors had long awaited.
In October 2025, after approval delays by the US SEC, the Solana ETFs (SOL) from VanEck, 21Shares, Fidelity, Grayscale and Bitwise were listed on the NYSE and Nasdaq, marking the first altcoin ETFs without derivatives to enter the US market.
Shortly after, ETFs linked to Litecoin (LTC) and Hedera (HBAR) also emerged in late October 2025, providing investors with regulated access to these cryptocurrencies via exchange-traded funds.
These were later joined by several XRP ETFs, including the recently launched 21Shares XRP ETF (TOXR).
These spot XRP ETFs sit alongside legacy futures-based XRP funds such as the ProShares Ultra XRP ETF that were approved earlier in the year, offering investors both leverage and directional strategies tied to XRP price movements.
The back-to-back altcoin ETF approvals came amid a new approach by the U.S. SEC that allows for generic listing standards, a simplified pathway that eliminates previous procedural bottlenecks.
Crypto ETFs expected to launch in 2026
While the first spot altcoin ETFs have already debuted, a broader wave is poised for approval as the SEC processes a growing pipeline of applications.
Several tokens have attracted considerable interest from issuers and analysts, and are widely expected to be approved if regulatory conditions remain favorable.
Dogecoin (DOGE), along with filings from Bitwise and others, sits at the top of this list, with Bloomberg analysts placing high odds on its eventual approval.
Cardano (ADA), Avalanche (AVAX) and Polkadot (DOT) ETFs are also high in active regulatory queues as issuers aim to expand investor choice.
Beyond that, altcoins like Tron (TRX), Chainlink (LINK), Sui (SUI), Aptos (APT), and multi-chain index ETFs are also in various stages of review or investor watchlists.
Some of the most intriguing filings are those that push the boundaries of what a crypto ETF can be, including thematic derivatives and memecoin-related products.
Proposals for ETFs tracking tokens like BONK, politically themed assets like TRUMP, and even baskets tied to NFTs highlight the experimental energy in this phase of crypto’s integration with traditional finance, although the odds of approval for these speculative vehicles remain mixed and dependent on regulatory frameworks that have yet to be fully formed.
Looking ahead to 2026, cryptocurrency investors can expect capital flows to evolve and diversify as new crypto ETFs are approved, providing alternative risk exposures.
While Bitcoin and Ethereum remain the largest in terms of assets under management, emerging altcoin ETFs could spark new interest in assets that previously lacked regulated access.
At the same time, ETF approvals are likely to amplify cryptocurrencies’ correlations with traditional markets and introduce more systematic strategies in portfolio design.


