To help you decide if Litecoin is right for your cryptocurrency portfolio or trading strategy, here’s a look at the history of Litecoin, how it works, and how to buy it. 

What Is Litecoin?

Litecoin launched in 2011 as a decentralized currency by a former Google employee named Charlie Lee.  Litecoin is community supported by volunteers who work to update the open-source code that runs the Litecoin network. Just like Bitcoin, Litecoin uses blockchain technology that makes transactions secure. Transactions on the Litecoin network are tracked by miners, which are processing computers that can earn Litecoin for doing the processing work behind the scenes. Based on the current configuration, there will be a maximum of 84 million litecoins created before the network stops issuing new coins.

Special Features of Litecoin

Because it is a fork of Bitcoin, Litecoin works just like its older and bigger sibling in most ways. But the special features that set it apart make it a lighter alternative to Bitcoin, hence the name Litecoin. Litecoin is run by a dedicated group of developers who coordinate on social media and Github, a coding platform. Because it is open source, you could make a copy of Litecoin for free and make changes to the code to use for applications or even launch your own lightweight cryptocurrency if you wanted to. But for the vast majority of people, sticking with existing cryptocurrencies is the best way to go.

Total Supply of Litecoin

The maximum supply of Litecoin is 84 million coins. As of July 2021, over 66 million coins have been mined. That leaves about 20% of the total supply remaining to be mined.

Rewards for Mining and Halving 

As of July 2021, Litecoin miners are awarded 12.5 new LTC per block verified. That number is halved every 840,000 blocks, which happens around every four years. This is higher compared to Bitcoin, where miners are awarded 6.25 new BTC for each block generated.

How To Buy Litecoin

As a popular cryptocurrency, Litecoin is widely available and supported by the greater cryptocurrency community. If you’ve ever bought Bitcoin, it’s a virtually identical process, but you’ll want to look for the symbol LTC in your trading app rather than BTC for Bitcoin. Major cryptocurrency exchanges like Coinbase, eToro, and BlockFi support Litecoin transactions.

Wallets

Litecoin is supported by many different wallets. Here are the options you could choose from.

Other Ways To Invest in Litecoin

If you don’t want to hold Litecoin directly, you may still be able to invest. Grayscale offers ETF-like trusts for cryptocurrencies such as the Grayscale Litecoin Trust.