What is Q-Bit (QBT)?
Q-Bit (QBT) is the investment token of the Q-Bit platform - a cloud-based quantum computing orchestration layer that positions itself as "one portal to many quantum machines." The platform's thesis is straightforward: quantum hardware is expensive, fragmented and locked behind vendor-specific interfaces, and most enterprises have no realistic path to owning it. Q-Bit aggregates that capacity, routes workloads to whichever quantum system is best suited for a given job, and records everything on-chain for audit.
The QBT token is how investors gain exposure to that orchestration layer. Rather than betting on a single quantum hardware provider - a high-variance wager given the state of the field - QBT holders participate in the growth of the aggregator that sits above all of them.
What does Q-Bit actually do?
The platform exposes a secure web portal through which enterprises submit computational workloads. A proprietary orchestration layer then routes each job to whichever quantum or quantum-inspired system offers the best combination of throughput, cost and result fidelity for that particular problem, returning insights through the same portal.
Everything the platform does is tracked on-chain. Usage, result metadata, workflow receipts and ecosystem growth metrics are all written to a public ledger so that partners, investors and auditors can measure real-world impact over time. The company summarises the design philosophy as "outcome first, hardware second" - the token holder is exposed to quantum-powered results, not to the equipment itself.
Which problems is Q-Bit solving?
Q-Bit's target workloads cluster around six application areas: open-ended quantum research, molecular and materials simulation, combinatorial optimisation, large-scale data analysis, rapid experimental iteration, and post-quantum cryptography transition planning.
That last item is increasingly urgent. NIST finalised its post-quantum cryptography standards (ML-KEM, ML-DSA, SLH-DSA) in 2024, and every organisation handling long-lived sensitive data is on a clock to migrate its cryptographic stack before quantum computers become powerful enough to break today's public-key cryptography. Q-Bit provides both a practical PQC migration roadmap for clients and a research platform for testing quantum-resistant algorithms against live quantum hardware.
What validates the quantum thesis?
Google's Quantum Echoes algorithm, run on its Willow chip, recently demonstrated about 13,000x speed-up over the best classical algorithms on a class of problems directly relevant to AI training and molecular analysis - precisely the workloads Q-Bit orchestrates. That result is among the strongest recent signals that quantum computing has crossed from research curiosity into commercially useful territory.
Customer-facing testimonials published on Q-Bit's site claim concrete enterprise outcomes: drug-discovery shortlists collapsed from months to weeks, materials-screening runs that used to take a quarter completed over a weekend, logistics simulations producing 6-9% cost reductions, and previously cost-prohibitive trading-scenario analysis becoming routine.
How does the QBT token capture value?
The token sits between capital and quantum capacity. Investors buy QBT, the resulting capital funds expansion of quantum partnerships and compute reservation agreements, enterprise clients pay to execute workloads through the platform, and the revenue associated with that growing ecosystem accrues to token holders. The platform emphasises "investor-linked upside" - token value is designed to track real usage rather than speculation.
Because usage, capacity and result delivery are all logged on-chain, QBT holders can actually measure the ecosystem's expansion over time. This is unusual for a quantum computing investment - traditionally a black box of private hardware partnerships - and is the mechanism by which Q-Bit argues it earns its token-based capital structure.
Who is Q-Bit partnered with?
The platform operates on a deliberately non-exclusive model: it aggregates capacity across providers rather than locking into one. Public materials reference partnerships with Quantinuum (featured alongside Mitsui in the company's QIDO platform announcement for pharmaceutical and materials work), with Google's Willow team on algorithmic benchmarks, and with multiple undisclosed quantum infrastructure vendors.
The absence of single-vendor lock-in is a feature, not a bug. Quantum hardware is evolving so rapidly - gate counts, qubit counts, error correction techniques and pricing models all shift quarter to quarter - that the rational strategy is to remain hardware-agnostic and route workloads to whatever system wins a particular benchmark at a particular moment.
How does Q-Bit think about security?
Q-Bit is explicit about post-quantum cryptography from day one. The platform uses strong classical cryptography in the short term, with a published migration roadmap toward the NIST PQC standards as those standards are operationalised across the industry. One customer testimonial summarises the approach bluntly: "Post-quantum security is real work, not slides."
Beyond PQC, the design emphasises minimal data movement and reference-based workflows, so that sensitive client data can stay inside client environments rather than traversing the quantum provider stack. Every computational run carries a tamper-evident audit log, and optional on-chain receipts let compliance teams prove to external auditors that a given result came from a given system at a given time.
How is QBT priced on Cryptopricing?
QBT's live market is the QBT/USDT spot pair on BiFinance. Cryptopricing reads BiFinance's public market API - the same /api/market/tickers and /api/market/kLine endpoints that power BiFinance's own front end - so the figures shown here match the exchange down to the last digit. Results are cached for about three minutes to stay polite with the upstream rate limit.
Historical charts are built from BiFinance's kLine candles: hourly resolution for the short-term timeframes and daily resolution for longer windows. All prices are converted to USD assuming USDT parity with the dollar, a convention that holds within a few basis points under normal market conditions.
Where can you buy Q-Bit?
Q-Bit (QBT) is traded on a wide range of centralized and decentralized exchanges. The most liquid markets for QBT sit on tier-1 venues - the sort of exchanges where institutional desks and professional market makers rebalance continuously - which is what keeps the spread tight and the last price tied closely to fair value.
You can open the Markets section above to see the live list of exchanges quoting QBT, sorted by 24-hour volume. Each row links to the venue's trade page so you can go directly from research to execution without copying the ticker around by hand.
What is the daily trading volume of Q-Bit (QBT)?
The reported 24-hour trading volume of Q-Bit is $7.74K. Volume is a live reading of how much QBT changed hands across all tracked exchanges in the past day and tends to rise during periods of price discovery and fall during consolidation.
For traders, the ratio between volume and market cap is often more informative than either number on its own: a high vol-to-mcap ratio indicates liquid, actively traded supply, while a low ratio suggests that most holders are sitting on the asset.
What is the highest and lowest price for Q-Bit (QBT)?
Q-Bit reached an all-time high of $0.2531 on its all-time high, and an all-time low of $0.2368 on its all-time low. It is currently trading - from its peak and - from its bottom.
The distance from ATH is a useful gauge of recovery potential during a bear market and of stretched positioning during a bull market. Combined with the all-time-low figure it provides a quick statistical frame for thinking about where QBT sits in its long-run price range.
What is the market cap of Q-Bit (QBT)?
Q-Bit's market capitalization is currently $59.23M, and it is ranked #303 by market cap on Cryptopricing. Market cap is calculated as the current price multiplied by the circulating supply (200.00 million QBT are actively circulating today).
Market cap is a common but imperfect measure. It reflects the theoretical value of every circulating token at the current market price, but it doesn't capture how thin the top of the order book might be - an important caveat for tokens with low floats or illiquid cap tables.
What is the fully diluted valuation of Q-Bit (QBT)?
The fully diluted valuation (FDV) of Q-Bit is $49.65M. FDV is a projection of what the market cap would be if every token that will ever exist - including those that have not yet been unlocked, mined or issued - were in circulation at the current price.
FDV is a useful second reading alongside market cap. A large gap between mcap and FDV signals that future token emissions could dilute current holders, while a small gap indicates that supply is already mostly out.
How does the price performance of Q-Bit compare against its peers?
Over the past 24 hours, Q-Bit has moved -1.24%. Over the past seven days, the change is +113.08%. Comparing these figures to the global crypto market cap change (shown in the ticker at the top of this page) tells you whether QBT is leading, lagging or tracking the broader market.
For deeper analysis, the categories strip on the home page groups coins by theme - Layer 1, Meme, DePIN, AI, RWA and so on - and lets you compare Q-Bit against its closest peers. The category detail pages surface the underlying coins and their seven-day sparklines in a single view.
How to store Q-Bit?
Like any crypto asset, the right way to store QBT depends on how often you plan to use it. Long-term holders typically self-custody using a hardware wallet such as Ledger or Trezor, which keeps private keys offline and immune to most remote attacks.
For active traders, a reputable custodial exchange wallet can be appropriate, especially one with clear proof-of-reserves attestations. Whatever approach you choose, the most important rule is to keep your recovery phrase offline, never share it, and never enter it into a web form or attached to a DM - no legitimate support agent will ever ask for it.








