Crypto Market Cap & Momentum Tracker
30-day, 200-day and 1-year price change and a 0-100 momentum score for the top 100 coins by market cap. Sortable, filterable, free.
Top 100 Cryptocurrencies by Market Cap
| # | Name | Price | 24h % | 30D % | 200D % | 1Y % | Momentum ⓘ | Trend | Details |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Loading market signals… | |||||||||
How the Momentum Score works
Each coin is scored on a 0-100 scale from three price-change windows: 30-day change (50% weight, mapped −50% → 0 and +50% → 100), 200-day change (30% weight, mapped −100% → 0 and +100% → 100), and 1-year change (20% weight, same ±100% mapping). All three sub-scores are symmetric around 0%, so a coin whose price hasn't moved lands on exactly 50. The result is clamped to 0-100 and rounded — that means 100 is a ceiling, not an unbounded reading.
📈 Trending Up = score above 65 · ➡️ Stable = 35-65 · 📉 Trending Down = below 35.
Trends reverse. High-momentum coins also tend to carry the largest drawdowns. These labels summarise common technical indicators — they are not buy, sell or hold advice. Pair them with proper position size rules and a stop-loss-based risk management plan before acting on any signal.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is the Momentum Score calculated?
The score is a weighted average of three price-change windows: 50% on the 30-day change (mapped from −50% to +50% onto a 0-100 range), 30% on the 200-day change (mapped from −100% to +100%), and 20% on the 1-year change (same ±100% mapping). All three sub-scores are symmetric around 0%, so a coin whose price hasn't moved across every window lands on exactly 50. The result is clamped to 0-100 and rounded — 100 is a ceiling, not an unbounded reading.
What does Trending Up mean?
Trending Up means the coin's algorithmic momentum score is above 65 — typically a combination of a positive 30-day move, a positive 200-day move and a positive 1-year move. It is not a buy signal: trends reverse, and high-momentum coins also carry the highest drawdown risk.
Why are some stablecoins still in the table?
Stablecoins like USDT, USDC and DAI by design drift around 0% on every window, so the score lands near 50 ("Stable") rather than at any extreme. Use the Hide Stablecoins toggle above the table to filter them out, or pick the Stablecoins category chip to see only them.
Is this a buy recommendation?
No. The score and trend label are descriptive, not prescriptive — they summarise where each coin sits across three common price-change windows. They are not buy, sell or hold advice. Pair them with proper position sizing and a stop-loss-based risk-management plan, and consult a licensed financial professional before making any trade.