Key Takeaways

  • The bitcoin price today reclaimed above $65,000 after rising more than 3.5% on June 22.
  • BTC swung from an intraday low near $63,231 to a high near $65,468 in a single session.
  • Bitcoin dominance sat around 56.4%, with a market cap near $1.29 trillion.
  • Spot Bitcoin ETF flows steadied after a long outflow stretch, with June 12 net inflows of about $85.85 million.

The bitcoin price today pushed back above $65,000 after one of its sharper sessions in weeks. BTC rose more than 3.5% on Monday June 22, traveling from an intraday low near $63,231 to a high near $65,468, and was trading around $64,000 to $65,000 as of this week. The catalyst sat outside crypto: a US Iran ceasefire roadmap improved global risk appetite, and Bitcoin, as the market's most liquid risk asset, moved first.

Bitcoin Price Today: The Range And The Move

Across the week, BTC traded roughly between $63,600 and $65,500, with the wider range stretching from about $59,000 up to near $67,000 at the high. The standout was the speed of Monday's recovery, a reminder that geopolitics has been setting the tone more than any single on chain metric. Bitcoin's market cap held near $1.29 trillion, and its dominance stayed around 56.4%, meaning it still anchors more than half of total crypto value. For the rest of the tape, see our market analysis hub.

ETF Flows: From Outflows To Stabilizing

ETF demand has been the swing factor. US spot Bitcoin ETFs ran 13 straight days of net outflows from roughly mid May to June 3, totaling about $4.4 billion, and the week ending June 6 alone saw around $1.72 billion leave, the largest weekly outflow since February 2025. That streak ended on June 5 with a small net inflow, and by June 12 the funds drew about $85.85 million, with BlackRock's IBIT accounting for roughly $57.7 million. The drivers of the earlier exit were straightforward: strong US jobs data cut Fed rate cut bets and made bonds more attractive, while Iran risk pushed money toward safety. More fund coverage sits in our Bitcoin ETF updates.

The Bigger Picture

Context matters for anyone reading the bounce too optimistically. Bitcoin has been down about 50% from its October 2025 all time high at points this cycle, as macro forces like Fed policy, tariffs and geopolitics outweighed an otherwise friendly US regulatory backdrop. This week's rally repairs some of that damage but does not erase it. The level to watch is whether BTC can hold above $65,000; a clean defense of that area would suggest the ceasefire driven relief has staying power, while a slip back below $63,000 would point to more chop. Follow live moves on our homepage market tracker.