Tesla kept its Bitcoin position unchanged throughout the fourth quarter of 2025, according to the company’s earnings report released on January 28, 2026.
The firm maintained holdings of 11,509 BTC without executing any purchases or sales during the period, signaling continued commitment to its remaining digital asset exposure despite ongoing market volatility.
Even with no transactional activity, Tesla was required to record a $239 million post-tax impairment loss, driven entirely by accounting treatment rather than realized losses. Bitcoin’s price declined from roughly $114,000 at the start of the quarter to around $88,000 by year-end, forcing a markdown under current U.S. GAAP rules.
Bitcoin Accounting Weighs on Reported Earnings
Under existing accounting standards, companies must recognize impairment charges when the market value of digital assets falls below their carrying value, even if the assets are not sold.

Conversely, unrealized gains cannot be recorded unless the position is exited. As a result, Tesla’s Bitcoin holdings, currently valued at approximately $1 billion, contributed negatively to reported earnings despite remaining intact.
The impairment charge, combined with unfavorable foreign exchange movements, pushed Tesla’s GAAP net income for the quarter down to $840 million, highlighting how non-operational factors continue to influence headline profitability.
Core Business Performance Offsets the Impact
Outside of digital assets, Tesla’s operating results showed mixed but generally resilient performance. Quarterly revenue came in at $24.9 billion, slightly below analyst expectations of $25.1 billion. However, adjusted earnings per share reached $0.50, exceeding the consensus estimate of $0.45 and helping to stabilize investor sentiment following the release.
Markets appeared to look past the accounting-driven Bitcoin loss. Tesla shares rose 3.4% in after-hours trading, with investors focusing instead on margin resilience and continued progress in artificial intelligence, autonomy, and robotics initiatives.
A Smaller but Persistent Bitcoin Bet
Tesla has not altered its core Bitcoin position since selling approximately 75% of its original holdings in 2022, a move that was framed at the time as a liquidity measure. The remaining 11,509 BTC have since functioned as a long-term balance-sheet exposure rather than an actively managed asset.
The Q4 results underscore a recurring theme for corporate Bitcoin holders: reported earnings can swing sharply due to accounting mechanics, even when strategic positioning remains unchanged.
For Tesla, the quarter reaffirmed that its Bitcoin exposure is now a passive component of the balance sheet, volatile in accounting terms, but secondary to the company’s operational and technological trajectory.






