According to blockchain trackers and reporting by market outlets, SpaceX moved 1,215 BTC — roughly $133 million — into new wallet addresses late last week. The transfers were flagged by analytics firms on October 24, 2025. The company has not issued an explanation for the activity.
Blockchain data shows the movement split into roughly 300 BTC (about $33 million) and 915 BTC (about $100 million).
Based on reports, the destination addresses are newly created or newly associated with the company and are not yet broadly labelled on public trackers.
On-chain records list timestamps and transaction IDs, but the transfers are otherwise standard Bitcoin transactions with typical fees.
SPACEX JUST MOVED FUNDS TOTALLING $133.7M. THEY TRANSFERRED 300 BTC ($33M) AND 915 BTC ($100.7M) TO NEW WALLETS
The firm has engaged in large transfers before, and this action joins a string of high-value on-chain movements by corporate holders over the past year.
The size of the transfer and the profile of the sender drew immediate attention because SpaceX ranks among the larger private-company holders of Bitcoin.
While the transfers did not prompt a major price shock, they did spark conversations and volatility in trading feeds.
Whale trackers and exchanges flagged the transfer for a short time, and some crypto commentators took note of timing while prices were near recent highs.
For investors, these are moves worth nothing. A large on-chain transfer from a corporate wallet changes the demand picture around available supply for sale, will continue to exist, even if the coins are ultimately still held in the company’s custody.
Analysts identify a few clues on chain: the addresses are recently used, no immediate moves to exchanges, and the transfer is in multiple outputs.
These clues support the idea that the transaction is internal, meaning co-mingling coins from two cold storage wallets or simply moving coins to a new custodian.
Still, until SpaceX or a trusted representative comments, any explanation is provisional and should be treated cautiously.
Featured image from Getty Images, chart from TradingView