Bitcoin developers and analysts are debating one of the most controversial security ideas in the network’s history: whether coins left in older, quantum-vulnerable address types should eventually be frozen if owners do not migrate them.
The debate centers on BIP-361, a draft proposal titled “Post Quantum Migration and Legacy Signature Sunset.” The proposal would follow the introduction of a post-quantum Bitcoin output type and then gradually phase out legacy ECDSA and Schnorr signatures. In plain language, users would be pushed to move vulnerable coins to quantum-resistant addresses before a future deadline.
The issue has become heated because of the scale involved. CoinDesk reported that developers and analysts are debating whether roughly 5.6 million long-dormant BTC should be frozen rather than left exposed to future quantum attackers. That number refers to coins that have not moved for more than a decade, many of which analysts believe may already be lost.
What BIP-361 Actually Proposes
A Three-Step Migration Plan
BIP-361 is not an immediate freeze. It is a draft framework for what could happen after Bitcoin first adopts a post-quantum address type.
The proposal describes three phases. Phase A would stop users from sending new funds to quantum-vulnerable address types. Phase B would restrict or invalidate spending from legacy ECDSA and Schnorr outputs after a well-publicized deadline, effectively freezing coins that never migrated. Phase C remains unfinished and would explore a recovery path for legitimate owners, likely through zero-knowledge proofs of seed phrase possession.
That last part is critical. Even supporters acknowledge that any plan affecting existing coins needs a credible rescue mechanism. Without one, a freeze could permanently lock out users who still own their keys but missed the migration window.
BIP-361 Builds on BIP-360
BIP-361 follows BIP-360, which proposed a new pay-to-Merkle-root output type designed to help protect future Bitcoin transactions from quantum attacks. The problem is that protecting new addresses does not automatically secure old coins that are already sitting in exposed or legacy formats.
That is why the debate has shifted from pure cryptography to property rights. It is one thing to offer users a safer address format. It is another thing to make old coins unspendable if users fail to move them.
Why Quantum Computing Is Such a Serious Threat
Bitcoin’s security depends partly on cryptographic assumptions that today’s computers cannot break. A sufficiently advanced quantum computer could threaten those assumptions, especially where public keys are already visible on-chain.
That does not mean Bitcoin is under immediate attack today. BIP-361’s own framing is about future-proofing the network before the threat becomes practical. The authors describe quantum computing as a potential existential threat to Bitcoin’s cryptographic primitives, warning that a successful quantum attack could cause major economic disruption across the ecosystem.
The most sensitive coins include early pay-to-public-key outputs, where public keys are already exposed. CoinMarketCap Academy reported that roughly 1.7 million BTC sit in early P2PK addresses, including coins commonly attributed to Satoshi Nakamoto. Broader estimates of potentially vulnerable or long-dormant supply are much larger, which is where the 5.6 million BTC debate becomes explosive.
Supporters Say Freezing Could Prevent a Worse Disaster
Supporters of a sunset plan argue that doing nothing could be more dangerous than forcing migration. If quantum computers eventually become capable of deriving private keys from exposed public keys, attackers could move dormant coins into circulation and potentially trigger a market shock.
Jameson Lopp, one of BIP-361’s authors, has argued that he would rather freeze long-dormant BTC than allow future attackers to steal it. CoinDesk reported that Lopp sees the proposal as adversarial thinking about a future threat, not as something ready for immediate adoption.
The supporter argument is simple but uncomfortable. If coins are truly lost, freezing them may protect the network from future theft. If they are not frozen and quantum attackers recover them, the damage could fall on every Bitcoin holder through price disruption and loss of trust.
Critics Say It Violates Bitcoin’s Core Promise
Opponents see the proposal very differently. To them, freezing coins at the protocol level looks like confiscation, even if the intent is defensive.
Bitcoin’s strongest promise has always been that coins can be spent by whoever controls the valid private keys. Critics argue that BIP-361 would change that principle by making ownership conditional on migrating before a deadline. Bitcoin.com highlighted that some critics call the proposal “monetary suicide,” warning that a forced freeze could damage Bitcoin’s scarcity premium and undermine its reputation as property outside political control.
Adam Back and others have pushed for less coercive approaches, including optional upgrades rather than mandatory freezes. CoinDesk reported that the debate has split between those who favor forced migration and those who believe Bitcoin should avoid any rule that makes unmoved coins unspendable.
Alternatives Are Already Being Discussed
One alternative is a “quantum tripwire” or canary fund. Under that idea, Bitcoiners could create a public bounty address vulnerable to quantum attack. If someone spends from it, that would prove the threat is real and could trigger emergency protections. CoinDesk reported that some developers see this as a way to avoid a pre-scheduled freeze unless an actual quantum attack is demonstrated.
BitMEX Research has also discussed a canary-style approach, where donated BTC would act as an alarm system for quantum capability. Supporters argue this avoids freezing coins based on forecasts, while critics warn it may wait too long and give attackers the first move.
That disagreement captures the core governance problem. Bitcoin needs to prepare before quantum computers become dangerous, but acting too early could damage the very property rights that make Bitcoin valuable.
What This Means for Bitcoin Holders
For ordinary users, there is no immediate action required from BIP-361 itself. It is a draft proposal, and even reports covering it emphasize that it is not positioned for near-term adoption. Any serious implementation would require broad technical review, social consensus and likely years of migration planning.
Still, the debate is a warning. Bitcoin’s long-term security model will eventually need a post-quantum migration strategy. Wallet developers, custodians, exchanges and long-term holders should pay attention to how the discussion evolves, especially once a concrete post-quantum address standard gains traction.
The hardest cases will be dormant wallets. Active users can migrate. Lost coins cannot. Coins held by estates, old custodians or forgotten cold storage setups may fall somewhere in between.
What Comes Next
The next signal is whether BIP-361 gains serious support among Bitcoin Core contributors or remains a provocative draft. The proposal’s current status is informational and draft, which means it is part of the discussion, not a scheduled network change.
The second signal is whether BIP-360 or another post-quantum output proposal progresses. Without a widely accepted quantum-resistant destination, the freeze debate cannot move from theory to implementation.
The third signal is outside Bitcoin entirely: real progress in quantum computing. If credible evidence appears that quantum machines are approaching the ability to break Bitcoin’s exposed public keys, the community’s tolerance for aggressive defenses may change quickly.
For now, BIP-361 has forced Bitcoin into a difficult conversation. Protecting the network from future quantum theft may require a migration plan. But any plan that freezes coins will have to answer a much bigger question: can Bitcoin defend itself without compromising the unconditional ownership that made it valuable in the first place?
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, or legal advice. Always conduct your own research before making any investment decisions.


















