Bitcoin (BTC 7.94%) is a revolutionary cryptocurrency. In the years that followed its 2009 launch, it attracted hordes of investors who believed it could transform the entire financial system. But in 2013, two friends named Billy Markus and Jackson Palmer felt the crypto industry was suddenly taking itself too seriously, so they launched a meme token called Dogecoin (DOGE 8.11%) to lighten the mood.
By piggybacking off the "Doge" meme that was sweeping the internet at the time, the two friends were able to attract a significant amount of attention to the project. By 2021, Dogecoin had amassed a peak market capitalization of over $90 billion, but it swiftly lost more than 90% of its value in the months that followed.
That volatility has been a hallmark of the Dogecoin investing experience. In fact, after having a relatively strong year in 2024, the token plummeted by more than 61% in 2025. Looking ahead, here's where I predict the meme token will end up in 2026.
Image source: Getty Images.
Dogecoin lacks a true use case
For a cryptocurrency to generate consistent upside, it needs at least one use case that drives people to constantly buy more of it. Bitcoin, for example, typically experiences high demand from investors who consider it to be a legitimate store of value. Ether (ETH 7.57%), on the other hand, is the native cryptocurrency in the Ethereum network, where businesses develop decentralized software applications in areas such as gaming and finance.
It's no coincidence that both Bitcoin and Ether set new record highs in 2025. Dogecoin, however, is still languishing significantly below its 2021 peak, because it lacks utility, which means it doesn't have a real source of demand. As a result, speculative investors typically have the greatest influence over its performance, and that isn't a recipe for long-term success.
According to crypto directory Cryptwerk, just 2,149 businesses worldwide are willing to accept Dogecoin as payment, and most of them are obscure providers of internet and crypto services. That's a drop in the bucket of the 359 million businesses registered globally, and consumers won't buy tokens if they can't spend them at their favorite stores.
Since Dogecoin hasn't set a new all-time high in almost five years, it clearly isn't a reliable store of value, either, so it doesn't receive much demand from long-term investors.

CRYPTO: DOGE
Key Data Points
Dogecoin has a supply issue that could fuel more downside in 2026
New Dogecoin tokens can be obtained by almost anyone through a process called mining, which involves solving complex mathematical problems using computers, to validate transactions on the blockchain. The miners who successfully solve these problems are paid rewards in Dogecoin.
Bitcoin is minted in exactly the same way, but there is one key structural difference: It has a capped supply of 21 million coins, a cap that can never be increased, whereas Dogecoin's supply is technically limitless. Although only 5 billion new Dogecoin tokens can be mined each year, there is no end date, so new supply will constantly enter circulation indefinitely.
An unlimited supply is a gravity-like force on the price of any asset. Dogecoin has a circulating supply of 168.5 billion tokens as I write this, and at the current price of $0.11 per token, it has a market capitalization of $17.9 billion. When its supply inevitably doubles to 337 billion tokens over the next 34 years or so, the price per token will need to halve just for its market cap to remain stable.
In other words, existing Dogecoin investors are going to face constant dilution, which will erode the value of their holdings. That will never change -- even if a genuine use case is discovered one day, any value it adds will gradually fade as new tokens enter circulation.
To determine where Dogecoin might go in 2026, we can look to the past. When it plunged by more than 90% from its 2021 peak, it set a low of $0.05 per token. Dogecoin is clearly trending toward that level right now, and it implies a further downside of 54% from here.





