Starknet launches strkBTC, a Bitcoin asset enhancing privacy with zero-knowledge proofs

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Bitcoin’s biggest feature is also its biggest vulnerability. Every transaction, every balance, every wallet is visible to anyone with a block explorer and five minutes to spare. For casual users, that transparency is a minor nuisance. For whales holding serious capital, it’s a security risk that has contributed to a rise in targeted theft and social engineering attacks.

Starknet thinks it has a fix. On May 12, the Ethereum layer-2 network launched strkBTC, a wrapped Bitcoin token built on its STRK20 privacy framework that lets holders move BTC into DeFi while keeping their transaction details hidden behind zero-knowledge STARK proofs.

How strkBTC actually works

Here’s the basic idea: you take your Bitcoin, bridge it to Starknet, and receive strkBTC, an ERC20-compatible token. The twist is what Starknet calls “shielded mode.”

When enabled, shielded mode conceals your balances and transfer amounts using zero-knowledge proofs. The network can verify that a transaction is legitimate without revealing who sent what to whom, or how much was involved.

The technology underpinning this is STARK proofs, a type of zero-knowledge cryptography that Starknet has been developing for years. Unlike some competing privacy approaches, STARKs don’t require a trusted setup ceremony, meaning there’s no secret group of participants whose honesty you need to take on faith.

Privacy is optional, not mandatory. Users can toggle shielded mode on or off depending on their needs. This is a deliberate design choice that separates strkBTC from fully private cryptocurrencies like Monero or Zcash, which have faced delistings from exchanges precisely because their privacy is always on and makes compliance difficult.

The compliance angle

The mechanism is viewing keys. strkBTC holders can share these cryptographic keys with third-party auditors, giving authorized parties the ability to see through the privacy shield for specific accounts.

There’s also a blocking layer for sanctioned assets. Starknet has built in the ability to prevent tokens associated with sanctioned addresses from entering the shielded pool in the first place.

Starknet describes this approach as “practical privacy.” Confidential by default, auditable upon request.

Wallet and bridge support

Supported wallets include Xverse and Ready X, both of which enable private transfers natively within the strkBTC system.

On the bridging side, Atomiq and Garden are providing the on-ramps for converting Bitcoin into strkBTC.

What this means for investors

The wrapped Bitcoin market is crowded. WBTC, tBTC, cbBTC, and various other flavors of tokenized Bitcoin already exist across multiple chains. What none of them offer is native, zero-knowledge privacy. That’s the gap strkBTC is targeting.

For Starknet itself, strkBTC represents a strategic bet on becoming the privacy-first layer-2 for institutional capital. The network has historically positioned itself as a scaling solution, competing with Arbitrum, Optimism, and other rollups primarily on throughput and cost.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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