42 countries ยท Sorted by price in sats ยท index
Countries
42
Cheapest
139.3k sats
Most Expensive
898.7k sats
BTC/USD
$75,946
| # | Country | Sats Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Finland | 139.3ksats |
| 2 | Hong Kong | 142.5ksats |
| 3 | Italy | 151.7ksats |
| 4 | Brazil | 165.6ksats |
| 5 | Belgium | 178.0ksats |
| 6 | Switzerland | 178.0ksats |
| 7 | Singapore | 178.0ksats |
| 8 | South Korea | 178.4ksats |
| 9 | Norway | 178.4ksats |
| 10 | France | 178.8ksats |
| 11 | Denmark | 182.4ksats |
| 12 | Japan | 182.4ksats |
| 13 | Sweden | 182.4ksats |
| 14 | South Africa | 182.4ksats |
| 15 | United Kingdom | 187.6ksats |
| 16 | Greece | 187.6ksats |
| 17 | India | 187.6ksats |
| 18 | China | 192.0ksats |
| 19 | Austria | 195.1ksats |
| 20 | Germany | 195.5ksats |
| 21 | Australia | 205.1ksats |
| 22 | Chile | 209.1ksats |
| 23 | Slovenia | 209.2ksats |
| 24 | Slovakia | 213.7ksats |
| 25 | Canada | 214.0ksats |
| 26 | Colombia | 214.0ksats |
| 27 | Spain | 214.4ksats |
| 28 | Latvia | 217.5ksats |
| 29 | Ireland | 221.5ksats |
| 30 | Russia | 221.5ksats |
| 31 | United States | 221.5ksats |
| 32 | Poland | 221.9ksats |
| 33 | Lithuania | 227.5ksats |
| 34 | Netherlands | 227.5ksats |
| 35 | New Zealand | 227.5ksats |
| 36 | Mexico | 230.7ksats |
| 37 | Estonia | 235.0ksats |
| 38 | Israel | 244.3ksats |
| 39 | Czech Republic | 253.9ksats |
| 40 | Portugal | 271.0ksats |
| 41 | Hungary | 366.3ksats |
| 42 | Turkey | 898.7ksats |
This page shows property index prices across 42 countries, converted to Bitcoin satoshis at a rate of $75,946 per BTC. The rankings are sorted from cheapest to most expensive, helping you compare the true cost of property index globally using a single universal unit of account.
Pricing items in satoshis (sats) provides a universal benchmark that transcends local currencies and inflation. One Bitcoin equals 100,000,000 satoshis. By viewing prices in sats, you can directly compare costs across borders without worrying about exchange rate distortions. As Bitcoin appreciates over time, sat prices tend to decrease, revealing the deflationary nature of sound money.