Blockchain, at its core, is a decentralized distributed database or ledger. So, how does the "blockchain ledger" keep records? In current blockchain projects, there are two mainstream accountingBlockchain, at its core, is a decentralized distributed database or ledger. So, how does the "blockchain ledger" keep records? In current blockchain projects, there are two mainstream accounting
Learn/Cryptocurrency Knowledge/Basic Concepts/What Is Uns...put (UTXO)?

What Is Unspent Transaction Output (UTXO)?

Feb 9, 2026MEXC
0m
Bitcoin
BTC$60,800-4.72%
Zcash
ZEC$317.61-39.42%
Solana
SOL$65.08-6.46%


Blockchain, at its core, is a decentralized distributed database or ledger. So, how does the "blockchain ledger" keep records? In current blockchain projects, there are two mainstream accounting methods: The Account Balance Model (represented by Ethereum), and the Unspent Transaction Output (UTXO) Model (represented by Bitcoin). Understanding UTXO helps in comprehending the accounting logic behind Bitcoin's blockchain.

UTXO, which stands for Unspent Transaction Output, can be understood as the fundamental unit in Bitcoin transactions. For example, if Bob receives a Bitcoin payment and doesn't spend it, that Bitcoin becomes a UTXO. The UTXO model is similar to having a wallet where each UTXO is like a one-time-use paper bill. Each UTXO (paper bill) represents a specific amount of money, and by adding up all the UTXOs (paper bills), you can determine a user's balance.

In each transaction, whole integer multiples of UTXOs are used. For example, you can use 1 UTXO, 2 UTXOs, but you can't use fractions like 0.5 UTXO (similar to not being able to use half a paper bill). When a transaction occurs, the existing UTXOs (old paper bills) are consumed, and new UTXOs (new paper bills) are created. For example:In the morning, you go to buy coffee and a pastry, which costs $5. You hand the cashier a $10 bill. This $10 bill, represented as one UTXO, is given to the merchant. The merchant then gives you $5 in change, and at this point, you receive a new UTXO (a new $5 bill).

If this transaction occurs on a blockchain using the UTXO model, how would it operate? To understand this, we can abstract three transfer scenarios with examples, omitting miner fees for simplicity:

1.Two-Person Transactions


Let's assume Bob receives 10 BTC, so he has a UTXO of 10 BTC associated with his Bitcoin address. Now, Bob needs to transfer 2 BTC to Alice. In this case, the 10 BTC UTXO will be spent as a whole (the old paper bill is used up). 2 BTC (new paper bill) will be sent to Alice, and the remaining 8 BTC (new paper bill) will be returned to Bob as change. In other words, the original 10 BTC existed as a single UTXO, but during the transaction, this UTXO (the old paper bill) was destroyed and no longer exists. Instead, it was replaced by two new UTXOs (new paper bills): one belonging to Bob with a value of 8 BTC (which is the change returned to Bob), and the other belonging to Alice with a value of 2 BTC. In the future, Alice can use this UTXO as a balance to transfer to others.


If Alice wants to transfer those 2 BTC to Frank and to prevent Alice from double-spending those 2 BTC (which is akin to the well-known double-spending attack), miners need to verify that the UTXO has not been used in other transactions. If this UTXO has already been spent in a prior transaction, miners will reject the execution of this new transaction.

2. Multi-Party Transactions


Let's go through two examples to deepen our understanding. (1) One Address Transfers to Three Addresses (2) Three Addresses Transfer to One Address. Let's refer to these four addresses as A, B, C, and D. Scenario ① A transfers to B, C, and D. Scenario ② A, B, and C transfer to D. Initially, Address A has 10 BTC while B, C, and D have 0 BTC.

In scenario (1), Address A initially has one 10 BTC UTXO and wants to transfer 2 BTC to each of the addresses B, C, and D.


First, the original 10 BTC UTXO from A is entirely spent, and 2 BTC is sent to each of the addresses B, C, and D. The remaining 4 BTC is returned to A as change. At this point, the previous 10 BTC UTXO no longer exists and becomes four new UTXOs, one belonging to A valued at 4 BTC, and the other three belonging to B, C, and D, all valued at 2 BTC. After the transfer occurs, there is 1 UTXO of 4 BTC in Address A, 1 UTXO of 2 BTC in Address B, 1 UTXO of 2 BTC in Address C, and 1 UTXO of 2 BTC in Address D.

Now, let's simulate scenario (2), where A, B, and C each transfer 2 BTC to D.


The UTXO of 4 BTC at Address A will be spent as a whole, of which 2 BTC is transferred to D and 2 BTC is given as change to itself. The UTXO of 2 BTC in Address B is transferred to D, and the UTXO of 2 BTC in Address C is transferred to D. After the transfers have occurred, there will be 1 UTXO of 2 BTC in Address A, none at Address B, none at Address C, and 4 UTXOs of 2 BTC at Address D (1 of which is left over from the transfer happening in scenario ① and the rest are from scenario ②).

3. Two-Person Transaction, One Person has Multiple UTXOs


Suppose A has multiple UTXOs, which are 1 BTC UTXO, 2 BTC UTXO, 3 BTC UTXO, and 4 BTC UTXO, and B has no BTC. At this point, A needs to transfer 2.5 BTC to B. How does the UTXO model work?


At this point, the UTXO of 2 BTC in Address A will be transferred directly to B. The UTXO of 1 BTC will be spent as a whole, of which 0.5 BTC will be transferred to B, and 0.5 BTC will be given back as change. After the transfer, there are still 0.5 BTC UTXO, 3 BTC UTXO and 4 BTC UTXO in Address A. B has 2 BTC UTXO and 0.5 BTC UTXO.

In cryptocurrencies that utilize the UTXO model, if a user mistakenly enters an incorrect contract address, it is highly likely that the funds will be irrecoverable. This is because UTXOs do not store additional information about the transaction's outgoing state, and once a cryptocurrency transaction is completed, the corresponding UTXO no longer exists in the database. In essence, the system assumes that you have already spent the funds, and this action cannot be undone. Furthermore, if the contract address is incompatible or incorrect, it can lead to erroneous inputs, meaning the recipient cannot properly receive the cryptocurrency. As a result, it is very probable that the cryptocurrency will be unrecoverable.

We can see that: ① UTXOs record events rather than final states. ② Each UTXO represents a specific quantity of Bitcoin, and the sum of all UTXOs determines the account balance. ③ A UTXO is a Bitcoin transaction output. ④ A complete transaction consists of transaction outputs (senders) and transaction inputs (recipients). Transaction outputs can be referred to as Outputs, and transaction inputs can be referred to as Inputs. After a transaction is completed, any newly generated UTXOs are recorded in the Bitcoin ledger and can be used for further transactions. UTXOs, as the cornerstone of Bitcoin transactions, offer advantages such as security, privacy, and scalability. They serve as the foundational transaction framework for numerous blockchain projects.

The following tokens listed on MEXC use the UTXO model:


ADA, AE, AVAX, BCH, BCHA, BEAM, BHD, BSV, BTC, BTCV, BTM, BTM2, CHIA, CKB, DASH, DOGE, FIRO, HC, HNS, HYDRA, IOEX, KAS(KASPA), LBC, LBTC, LTC, MASS, PAC, PLCU, PSL, QTUM, RVN, SC, SYS, UT, WIT, XRD, XVG, ZEL, ZEN


If there is an error in transferring the cryptocurrency mentioned above, we will be unable to assist in recovering it. Please make sure to enter the correct deposit address before initiating any deposits!


Market Opportunity
Bitcoin Logo
Bitcoin Price(BTC)
$60,800
$60,800$60,800
-4.84%
USD
Bitcoin (BTC) Live Price Chart

Popular Articles

View More
Bitcoin Future: What It Is, How It Works, and Where BTC Is Headed

Bitcoin Future: What It Is, How It Works, and Where BTC Is Headed

Bitcoin sits at the center of one of finance's most debated questions: what does the Bitcoin future actually look like? The answer has two layers — the financial instrument called Bitcoin futures,

The Stefan Thomas IronKey: 7,002 Bitcoin, a Lost Password, and Two Attempts Left

The Stefan Thomas IronKey: 7,002 Bitcoin, a Lost Password, and Two Attempts Left

Key Takeaways Stefan Thomas received 7,002 BTC in 2011 as payment for producing an animated educational video titled "What Is Bitcoin?" He stored the private keys on an IronKey S200 — a

What Is the Bitcoin Formula? Mining Profitability, Difficulty, and Supply Explained

What Is the Bitcoin Formula? Mining Profitability, Difficulty, and Supply Explained

Key Takeaways The Bitcoin formula refers to the open-source mathematical rules governing how the network issues coins, adjusts mining difficulty, and enforces its supply cap — not any trading

Bitcoin Merch Review: Miners, Gear, and What Real Buyers Think

Bitcoin Merch Review: Miners, Gear, and What Real Buyers Think

Key Takeaways Bitcoin Merch (bitcoinmerch.com) is a US-based store selling Bitcoin mining hardware, hardware wallets, and Bitcoin-branded apparel from Chatsworth, California. Their most popular

Hot Crypto Updates

View More
Bitcoin Crashes Below $66K: $1.86B Liquidated — Perfect Storm or Buying Signal?

Bitcoin Crashes Below $66K: $1.86B Liquidated — Perfect Storm or Buying Signal?

Bitcoin crashed to $65,000–$66,000 in 24 hours, triggering over $1.86B in liquidations. Strategy's first BTC sale in 4 years, record ETF outflows, US-Iran tensions, and an AI stock rotation all

Congress Moves to Lock Bitcoin Into U.S. Law: What the ARMA Bill Actually Does

Congress Moves to Lock Bitcoin Into U.S. Law: What the ARMA Bill Actually Does

The U.S. Congress introduced the ARMA bill on May 21, 2026, proposing to codify a Strategic Bitcoin Reserve into federal law, authorizing the Treasury to acquire up to 1 million BTC over five years.

Why Is Bitcoin Rising Today?

Why Is Bitcoin Rising Today?

Why is Bitcoin rising today? We break down the three forces behind BTC's May 2026 rally — record ETF inflows, post-halving supply squeeze, and geopolitical safe-haven demand — with price levels, risk

Bitcoin (BTC) Bullish Price Prediction

Bitcoin (BTC) Bullish Price Prediction

Introduction to Bullish BTC Outlook Optimistic investors often look to bullish price predictions for Bitcoin (BTC) to identify the coin's growth potential during favorable market cycles. A bullish

Trending News

View More
AI Capital Flows Are Draining Liquidity from Crypto Markets, Analyst Says

AI Capital Flows Are Draining Liquidity from Crypto Markets, Analyst Says

TLDR: Hyperscalers are projected to spend $650–700B on AI infrastructure in 2025, outpacing crypto inflows. BTC is down 20% YTD while Micron, Nvidia, and AMD posted

Strategy’s BTC Sale Raises Questions Over Leveraged Treasury Model, Grayscale Says

Strategy’s BTC Sale Raises Questions Over Leveraged Treasury Model, Grayscale Says

Grayscale says Strategy’s leveraged Bitcoin accumulation model faces mounting pressure, warning that weaker preferred-share prices could limit BTC purchases and

Bitcoin ETF Investors End 13 Day Outflow Streak With $3 Million BTC Inflow

Bitcoin ETF Investors End 13 Day Outflow Streak With $3 Million BTC Inflow

Bitcoin exchange traded fund products have reportedly recorded a combined inflow of approximately 3 million dollars worth of Bitcoin, marking the end of a h

Crypto Market Update - 5 June 2026: ETF Outflow Streak Breaks as BTC Tests $62K

Crypto Market Update - 5 June 2026: ETF Outflow Streak Breaks as BTC Tests $62K

Bitcoin holds $62,136 as 17-of-19-day ETF outflow streak ends; Zcash collapses 40% on integrity gap.

Related Articles

View More
Crypto Fear and Greed Index Drops to Extreme Fear, What It Means and How Investors Should Respond

Crypto Fear and Greed Index Drops to Extreme Fear, What It Means and How Investors Should Respond

As of May 28, 2026, the crypto fear and greed index has dropped sharply to 22 — placing the market deep inside Extreme Fear territory once again.Social media is flooded with panic alerts, and traders

What is Stablecoin?

What is Stablecoin?

A stablecoin is a stable cryptocurrency backed by fiat currency, cryptocurrencies, or other assets like gold. Its purpose is to anchor the value to fiat currencies such as the US dollar or Euro. It co

What is ERC-20?

What is ERC-20?

After years of development, Ethereum (ETH) has formed a complete ecosystem that allows developers to innovate and create complex DAPP (Decentralized Application) applications based on Ethereum. ERC-20

What is Blockchain?

What is Blockchain?

Blockchain is not only confusing to newcomers in the cryptocurrency world, but many seasoned traders in the cryptocurrency community may also find it challenging to fully understand. However, after re

Sign Up on MEXC
Sign Up & Receive Up to 10,000 USDT Bonus
RealStocks Now Live
RealStocks Now LiveRealStocks Now Live
Trade real U.S. stock via regulated brokerage