Bitcoin devs saw a surge in development activity throughout 2025, pushing more code, increasing contributions, and addressing key network issues, as the cryptocurrency continued to break price records and attract institutional attention under a crypto-supportive U.S. government.
Bitcoin devs expanded their efforts in 2025, with 135 individuals contributing code to Bitcoin Core throughout the year. This figure rose from just over 100 in 2024, continuing an upward trend since 2023, though still below the 2018 peak of 200 contributors.
They also changed 285,000 lines of code, which represented a 3% increase over the 276,000 lines changed the previous year. Jameson Lopp, co-founder of Casa, reported the data in his yearly development overview published Sunday.
The overall developer engagement mirrored Bitcoin’s rising valuation and regulatory environment.
The number of code commits to Bitcoin Core rose 1% year over year, reaching a total of 2,541 commits in 2025. While modest, this increase continued an upward climb that started in 2023 after a dip from the 2021 high of 3,500 commits.
In parallel, email activity on the Bitcoin Development Mailing List rose by 60% over the same period. Developers used the list to propose and discuss network changes, including the OP_RETURN limit debate.
Despite this growth, the mailing list volume still remains below the 2015 peak of 5,000 emails. Yet, the renewed discussions suggest stronger engagement across the community.
Lopp pointed out that communication plays a central role in decentralized development, making the rise in email volume an important indicator. These messages often form the basis of formal proposals.
Bitcoin Core underwent its first independent security audit last year, which was completed by the security firm Quarkslab. The audit, conducted in November, assessed the maturity and stability of the codebase.
According to the audit report, the software was described as “mature and well-tested” with no high or medium-severity bugs found. This outcome strengthened confidence in the core software used by most Bitcoin nodes globally.
In October, Bitcoin devs also implemented an update to increase the OP_RETURN data limit. This change allows users to embed larger volumes of non-financial data in transactions.
The update sparked technical discussions and debate across developer circles. However, it ultimately expanded functionality for use cases that rely on blockchain data storage.
Bitcoin Core’s development activity aligned with the cryptocurrency reaching over $126,000 in October on Coinbase. Increased institutional adoption helped fuel the asset’s momentum throughout the year.
Lopp’s report highlighted the correlation between Bitcoin’s market interest and software development. He noted the increased involvement reflected stronger long-term confidence in the network.
Bitcoin devs ended 2025 with renewed momentum, setting the stage for continued technical progress in 2026.
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