Publication Date: 03/20/2026 5:00 AM CST
NNS Post Type Icon

22% Say They Own Cryptocurrency

Publication: 03/20/2026 5:00 AM CST

Member Content

Watermark

The content you are trying to access is currently only available to Gold Circle Members. If you are a member, please log in to view.

To learn more about becoming a Gold Circle Member, please refer to our membership page.


Full Toplines: RESTRICTED
Full Crosstabs URL: RESTRICTED


Toplines are free for use after embargo, if any. Crosstabs are confidential and not for public release. However, you may cite specific demographic data from these reports.
For any data released, please cite Napolitan News Service.


Public Content

  • Just 22% of voters have personally invested in cryptocurrency.
    • More men (32%) than women (14%) say they have invested in cryptocurrency.
    • Forty percent (40%) of voters ages 35 to 44 have invested in this new type of trade.
    • Even more voters living in high-density areas (44%) say they have invested in cryptocurrency.
  • However, large majority (80%) of registered voters say they know what cryptocurrency is.
    • Among those who say they know what it is, 54% say that cryptocurrency is digital or virtual currency.
    • Others relate it to money in some way but use terms like "alternative currency" (8%) and "investment and trading" (8%).
    • Eight percent (8%) perceive cryptocurrency as fake.
  • On a related note, 34% of voters say they know what prediction markets are, and the other 66% don't know or are not sure.
    • For those who said they knew, 51% defined prediction markets as betting or trading on future events.
    • In a similar vein, another 26% similarly said these markets are about financial and economic forecasting.


This data is from a Napolitan News Service survey of 1,000 Registered Voters conducted online by Scott Rasmussen, March 11-12, 2026. RMG Research, Inc., conducted the field work for the survey. It has a margin of error of +/- 3.1.


Classifications
Post Type: NNS Poll Result
Post Tags: Economics | Other

Supporting Documents