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Better than Bitcoin? Why ‘fractionalized NFTs’ are the new store of value in 2026

2min Read

Liquidity, access, and shared ownership have given them a seat at the table.

Better than Bitcoin? Why 'fractionalized NFTs' are the new store of value in 2026

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Bitcoin [BTC] has been the uncontested “store of value” in the crypto space for years. But in 2026, there may be a new player.

Fractionalized NFTs tap into preferences in a way Bitcoin never really tried to. Whether that makes them a better store of value is still up for debate… but the fact that the conversation exists is saying more than it should.

Beyond Bitcoin!

In crypto, a store of value is an asset people trust to hold its worth over time.

For most of the past decade, Bitcoin has dominated that role, built on fixed supply, decentralization, and the belief that digital scarcity can rival gold.

But that’s changing. Fractionalized NFTs are making many investors rethink the concept of value ownership.

At their core, fractionalized NFTs split a single high-value NFT into smaller, tradable tokens (usually ERC-20s), each representing partial ownership.

Unlike traditional NFTs, which are all-or-nothing, or Bitcoin, which is purely fungible, fractional NFTs are right in between.

What’s changed now?

NFT

Source: CoinGecko

The appeal comes down to three things: access, liquidity, and better pricing.

Instead of needing six figures to buy a CryptoPunk or a rare NFT, investors can now buy small fractions (sometimes for under $10). This opens blue-chip digital assets to a much wider market.

The NFT fractionalization market was valued at about $3.8 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach $9.2 billion by 2033, growing at a 17.8% CAGR.

Source: HTF Market Intelligence

There’s steady trading activity across vault tokens and fractional NFT coins, even when general NFT volumes lag.

Source: HTF Market Intelligence

More buyers and sellers mean smaller price gaps, making these assets easier to price than one-off NFT sales.

Shared ownership makes fractional NFTs easier to trade, keeps markets active, and reduces the chance that value gets stuck in assets no one can sell.

Unlike Bitcoin, fractional NFTs can also be traded, staked, or used as collateral in DeFi to earn extra returns. They also cover more than art, including virtual land, music rights, and RWAs.

What comes next

Fractionalized NFTs may start attracting bigger players. Crypto exchanges and funds are paying attention to the better liquidity and clearer prices.

Meanwhile, these NFTs are also moving closer to RWAs, like property rights or media ownership, making them easier to understand and use.

Bitcoin still matters, but perhaps it’s no longer the only one.


Final Thoughts

  • Fractionalized NFTs are becoming a store of value.
  • Bitcoin is still the anchor, but digital value may no longer live in a single asset alone.

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Samyukhtha L KM is a Financial Journalist and Market Analyst at AMBCrypto whose work is defined by one central question: Is the latest trend in blockchain hype, or history in the making? Her expertise is built on a strong academic foundation, with a Master’s in Journalism and Mass Communication from Amity University and a Bachelor’s in Commerce from the University of Madras. This dual qualification equips her with a unique skill set: the financial acumen to dissect market mechanics and the journalistic rigor to investigate and communicate complex subjects with clarity. Samyukhtha specializes in analyzing the socio-economic impact of blockchain adoption and assessing the viability of new market narratives. This includes a focus on high-velocity, community-driven assets such as memecoins, where she evaluates sentiment and fundamentals. She is dedicated to providing readers with insightful, well-researched commentary that looks beyond immediate market moves to understand the long-term implications of decentralized technology.
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