Key Takeaways
US spot Bitcoin ETFs have attracted $3.29 billion over the past two months, lifting cumulative net inflows since January 2024 launch to $58.72 billionThe cumulative total remains $2.47 billion below the October 2025 peak of $61.19 billion -- the same month Bitcoin hit its all-time high above $126,000The two-month recovery has not yet offset the $6.38 billion in outflows recorded between November 2025 and February 2026 as Bitcoin fell from above $100,000 to nearly $60,000May began positively with $629 million in net inflows on Friday, the strongest single day in two weeksBitcoin is currently trading above $80,000 for the first time since January, providing a constructive backdrop for continued ETF flow recovery
Two consecutive months of net inflows into US spot Bitcoin ETFs signal a genuine recovery in institutional demand -- but a closer look at the cumulative data reveals a recovery that remains meaningfully incomplete relative to where things stood at the peak of last autumn's bull market.
The 11 US-listed spot Bitcoin ETFs have attracted $3.29 billion in net inflows over the past two months, according to SoSoValue data, with May opening on a strong note following Friday's $629 million single-day inflow. That has pushed cumulative net inflows since the products launched in January 2024 to $58.72 billion.
The number sounds large -- and it is -- but it sits $2.47 billion below the record cumulative high of $61.19 billion reached in October 2025, the same month Bitcoin printed its all-time high above $126,000. The gap is a useful reality check on the narrative of a full institutional demand recovery.
The Outflow Hole Is Not Yet Filled
The scale of the hole that needs to be filled becomes clearer when measured against the outflow period that preceded the current recovery. Between November 2025 and February 2026, investors pulled $6.38 billion from spot Bitcoin ETFs as Bitcoin fell from above $100,000 to nearly $60,000 -- a four-month stretch of sustained redemptions that reflected a combination of profit-taking at all-time highs, geopolitical risk aversion following the October flash crash, and broader macro uncertainty driven by the Iran conflict and elevated inflation.
The $3.29 billion recovered over March and April represents approximately half of that outflow figure. At the current pace, full recovery to the October cumulative peak would require several more months of sustained inflows at or above the recent monthly averages -- a trajectory that depends heavily on Bitcoin maintaining and building on its current position above $80,000, the Fed's rate path becoming more accommodative, and geopolitical risks around the Strait of Hormuz easing.
Recovery Is Real, Momentum Is the Question
The incomplete nature of the recovery is not necessarily a bearish signal. The direction of flows has clearly reversed, institutional appetite has returned, and the structural demand base from corporate treasury buyers -- Strategy's $3.9 billion in April purchases alone absorbed nearly five months of mining supply -- continues to provide a floor beneath spot prices.
What remains uncertain is whether the recovery can accelerate from here. The April monthly inflow of $1.97 billion was the highest since October 2025, but it still represents less than a third of the cumulative gap relative to the peak. Friday's $629 million single-day inflow -- the strongest in two weeks -- suggests momentum is building at the start of May, but with Bitcoin only recently breaking above $80,000 for the first time since January and the macro backdrop still clouded by Hormuz uncertainty and Fed higher-for-longer signals, the pace of flow recovery will depend on catalysts that remain outside the market's immediate control.
As SoSoValue data makes clear, the ETF recovery story is real -- but it is a story still being written rather than one that has reached its conclusion.