Robert Kiyosaki has renewed his long-standing warning of a historic market crash, saying the “biggest stock market crash in history” is now imminent.
In a recent post, the Rich Dad Poor Dad author referenced his 2013 book Rich Dad’s Prophecy, where he predicted a massive financial downturn. According to Kiyosaki, that moment is now approaching, and he views it as a major opportunity rather than a threat.
“Crashes Make You Rich,” Kiyosaki Says
Kiyosaki framed the coming downturn as a wealth transfer event. Those who prepared, he said, could become “richer beyond your wildest dreams.” Those who did not may face severe losses.
I Am Warning You: In Rich Dad’s Prophecy published 2013 I warned of the biggest stock market crash in history still coming.
That giant crash is now imminent.
The good news is those of you who followed my rich dad’s warning and prepared….the coming crash will make you richer…
— Robert Kiyosaki (@theRealKiyosaki) February 17, 2026
He emphasized that he is holding what he calls “real” assets, gold, silver, Ethereum, and Bitcoin, while avoiding what he describes as “fake” versions of those instruments.
More notably, he stated he is actively buying more Bitcoin as prices fall.
Why He’s Bullish on Bitcoin
Kiyosaki reiterated one of Bitcoin’s core arguments: fixed supply.
He pointed out that there will only ever be 21 million Bitcoin, and that nearly the full supply is already in circulation. In his view, panic-driven selloffs create rare accumulation windows for long-term investors.
He made it clear that he plans to buy more Bitcoin if markets crash further, arguing that downturns are when “priceless assets go on sale.”
Fear vs. Opportunity
While Kiyosaki’s tone is urgent, his message is consistent with his long-held philosophy: economic crises are buying opportunities for hard assets.
Whether the predicted crash materializes remains uncertain. But his stance is clear, he sees falling markets not as something to fear, but as a chance to accumulate Bitcoin and other scarce assets at discounted prices.






