Bitcoin ETF vs Buying Direct — My $5K Experiment

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Bitcoin ETF vs Buying Direct — My $5K Experiment

It was January 2024. The SEC had just approved spot Bitcoin ETFs, and everyone was losing their minds. I’d been trading crypto since 2017, so I figured I’d run a real-world test. I put $5,000 into a spot Bitcoin ETF and another $5,000 into direct Bitcoin holdings. Same day, same market conditions. I wanted to see which approach actually worked better for a regular investor like you.

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The hype around ETFs was deafening. “Institutional money is coming!” people screamed. But I’d also heard horror stories about exchange hacks, lost private keys, and wallet screw-ups. So I decided to settle this debate once and for all — with my own cash.

Let me walk you through the numbers, the headaches, and the surprising winner.

The Scenario

On January 11, 2024 — the first day of spot Bitcoin ETF trading — I split my capital. $5,000 went into the iShares Bitcoin Trust (IBIT) through my regular brokerage account. The other $5,000 bought actual Bitcoin on Coinbase, which I then moved to a hardware wallet (a Ledger Nano X).

My goal was simple: hold both for exactly 18 months and compare everything — fees, security, stress, and final returns. I wanted to know which method made more sense for someone who isn’t a crypto maxi but wants Bitcoin exposure.

At the time, Bitcoin was trading around $46,000. The ETF shares were priced at about $24.50 per share. I bought roughly 204 shares of IBIT and 0.1087 BTC directly. Let’s be clear: this wasn’t a massive bet. It was a realistic chunk of change for a middle-class investor.

What Happened

First 30 days? The ETF outperformed slightly. Weird, right? Both tracked Bitcoin’s price, but the ETF had this weird premium during the first week — people were panic-buying ETF shares, driving the price a few percent above the actual Bitcoin value. By day 7, IBIT was trading at a 2.3% premium to NAV. That meant I was getting more dollar exposure per share than the Bitcoin I held directly was worth.

But that premium evaporated by February. And then the real differences started showing.

In March 2024, Bitcoin hit a new all-time high of $73,000. My direct Bitcoin was up 58.7%. My ETF? Up 56.1%. That 2.6% gap was mostly from the ETF’s expense ratio — 0.25% annually — plus the bid-ask spread I paid when buying shares. It didn’t seem like much, but it compounded.

Then came the security trade-off. In June 2024, I almost lost my hardware wallet. I’d put it in a drawer, forgot the PIN, and spent three panic-stricken hours finding my recovery seed phrase. My wife thought I was having a heart attack. With the ETF, I just logged into my brokerage. No panic. No seed phrase. No stress.

By January 2025, Bitcoin was trading at $95,000. My direct BTC was up 106.5%. The ETF? Up 102.3%. The gap had widened to 4.2%. That’s $210 less in profit on the ETF — real money.

But here’s the kicker: in April 2025, I needed to sell $2,000 for an emergency car repair. Selling ETF shares took 30 seconds. Settlement took two days. Selling direct Bitcoin from my hardware wallet? I had to transfer it back to Coinbase (30-minute wait), sell (instant), then withdraw to my bank (another 2 days). Total time: about 3 hours of anxiety.

Bar chart comparing ETF vs direct Bitcoin returns over 18 months, showing ETF lagging by ~4% but with lower stress
Bar chart comparing ETF vs direct Bitcoin returns over 18 months, showing ETF lagging by ~4% but with lower stress

The Numbers

Metric Bitcoin ETF (IBIT) Direct Bitcoin
Initial Investment $5,000 $5,000
Final Value (18 months) $10,115 $10,325
Total Return +102.3% +106.5%
Annual Fees 0.25% (expense ratio) $0 (self-custody)
Time to Sell 30 seconds ~3 hours (including transfer)
Stress Level (1-10) 2 7

Why It Went Right (or Wrong)

The ETF won on convenience. No contest. If you’re not a crypto nerd, not interested in managing private keys, and just want Bitcoin exposure in your retirement account — the ETF is the obvious choice. You get it in an IRA, you get tax-advantaged treatment, and you never have to worry about losing your wallet in a house fire.

But direct Bitcoin won on returns. That 4.2% gap over 18 months is real. On a $100,000 investment, that’s $4,200. Over a decade, compounding that difference could be massive. Plus, with direct Bitcoin, you actually own the asset. You can use it in DeFi, lend it out, or just hold it without trusting a fund manager.

The hidden cost nobody talks about? Taxes. With the ETF, you get a simple 1099-B at year-end. With direct Bitcoin, every single transaction — buying, selling, swapping — is a taxable event. I spent 4 hours doing my crypto taxes this year. That’s time I’ll never get back. As Investopedia notes, the tax complexity is a real factor most people underestimate.

And let’s be honest — the ETF is safer for most people. Hardware wallets can be lost, stolen, or destroyed. I know a guy who threw away a hard drive with 12 Bitcoin on it. That’s worth over $1 million today. You can’t throw away an ETF.

What You Can Learn

  • Match the tool to the goal. If you’re investing for retirement in a tax-advantaged account, go ETF. If you want to use Bitcoin in DeFi or hold for very long term, go direct. Don’t mix them up — I saw people buying ETFs in taxable accounts and paying extra taxes for no reason.
  • Don’t underestimate the stress premium. Self-custody is hard. Really hard. If you’re the type who panics when you can’t find your keys, the ETF is worth the 0.25% fee. Your mental health has a dollar value.
  • Consider a hybrid approach. After my experiment, I now keep 70% in an ETF (inside my IRA) and 30% in direct Bitcoin (hardware wallet, long-term hold). That way I get the best of both worlds — easy access for retirement and pure ownership for my “never sell” stack. CoinDesk has a good breakdown of this strategy.

Would I Do It Differently?

Absolutely. I’d skip the pure experiment and just go hybrid from day one. The all-or-nothing approach was dumb. Holding 100% direct Bitcoin gave me better returns but worse sleep. Holding 100% ETF gave me better sleep but lower returns. The middle ground — 70/30 split — is the sweet spot. And I’d definitely use a better wallet setup. The Ledger Nano X worked, but I spent way too much time worrying about it. Next time, I’m using a multi-sig setup with a passphrase. Or maybe I’ll just stick with the ETF and use the extra time to, you know, live my life.

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