Easy Bitcoin Core Tutorial

Bitcoin Core Tutorial With Pictures

If you want to follow along with this bitcoin core tutorial you should download bitcoin core and let it synchronize first.  When you start Bitcoin Core it will take a long time to synchronize with the Bitcoin network because the software has to download the entire blockchain, which contains over five years of global transaction history.  Once you are synced the program will know the balance of every bitcoin address in existence and can verify when you send or receive bitcoins in real time.

Don’t have any bitcoin yet?  Get started with Bittrex.com, the leading cryptocurrency exchange since 2014.

You can find a download for the Bitcoin Core Wallet on Bitcoin.org

Once your wallet is synced it should look something like this:

bitcoin core tutorial 1
Synchronized Bitcoin Wallet

The first thing you should do is Encrypt your wallet.  Encrypting your wallet will password protect all of your bitcoin addresses.  If you do not encrypt your wallet, anyone with access to your computer can take your bitcoins.  There is no recovery process for this password so don’t forget it or all your bitcoins may be lost forever.  Once you have completed all the steps Bitcoin Core will have to restart to complete the process.

Encrypt Your Bitcoin Wallet

Once you have Encrypted your wallet, you should backup your wallet file on an external hard drive or USB flash drive.  Your wallet file (wallet.dat) stores the data for all of your public & private keys.  If you lose this data, you will lose the bitcoin in all of those bitcoin addresses.   Anytime you create a new bitcoin address or send bitcoins to someone, Bitcoin Core will add that new information to your wallet.dat file so it is best practice to backup your wallet file regularly.

Backup Your Bitcoin Wallet

Now that you are backed up, click under File and go to ‘receiving addresses’.  This contains a list of your public keys, they appear as a long string of characters.   Most bitcoin addresses start with a 1, but multisig wallets may generate bitcoin addresses that start with a 3 but you don’t need to learn multi-signature for this bitcoin core tutorial.

Here is the Bitcoin Address (public key) that Bitcoin Core generated for me: 1Q3tcw3zkFgwF5Tf1XFX9teZHqk4dqhdGn

Bitcoin Receiving Address

At this point you are ready to accept bitcoin.  You can share this address with anyone you want to receive money from.  I’m going to send myself 0.01 bitcoin from a different wallet, not shown in this bitcoin core tutorial.   Depending on the sending wallet the transaction will appear instantly or it may take a few minutes.    In this case it took about 15 seconds to show up, and a little notification popped up to let me know to check my Bitcoin Core wallet.

Incoming Bitcoin Transaction

The transaction will appear as pending until Bitcoin Miners confirm the transaction.  To confirm a transaction, miners have to find a new block which happens roughly every 10 minutes.  Most wallets accept a transaction after 3-6 block confirmations, so the funds are completely available after 30-60 minutes.  Some wallets will let you spend the bitcoins after only 1 confirmation, but it is best practice to wait for at least 3 blocks.  You can track the progress in from the transactions tab.  I know transaction is from a trusted source (me) so I don’t have to wait for any confirmations to move forward with the bitcoin core tutorial.  Note:  You do not need to leave Bitcoin Core open until the bitcoin is available, miners will confirm the transaction for you even if you close the program.

One Block Confirmation

If you use bitcoin regularly it can be difficult to keep track of your transaction history by seeing only public keys, so you may want to create a new bitcoin address for different purposes and label them.  Go back to your receiving addresses and create a new address with a label.  You can create as many new addresses as you want.  Some people choose to create a new address for every bitcoin transaction.

Create New Bitcoin Address

Now that you have created a new address, backup your wallet file again to make sure the bitcoins in ALL of your public keys are protected.

Receiving Addresses

Okay lets send 0.01 to this new address:  13BBBdLXWf3V97w1JYXbdSnxJWDhT5vsAT

Bitcoin Transactions

As you can see the transaction comes in labeled instead of the random generated string.  This makes it very easy to accept bitcoin as payment, simply by generating a new labeled address anytime you want to accept bitcoin.  You can also see that the first bitcoin transaction has been confirmed and the 0.01 bitcoin is available to be spend after only a few minutes.   If you are a merchant or service provider that is accepting bitcoin, you can use the Request tab to ask for a specific amount of bitcoin.  This will generate a QR code that people with a mobile phone wallet can scan to quickly send the desired bitcoin to your wallet.  Request Bitcoin Payment

You should use specific information so that later you can look back and know where you got that bitcoin from. Click request payment and the QR code will be generated. Bitcoin Payment QR Code

Anyone who scans this QR code can now send money to your bitcoin core wallet.   By default it will tell them to send 0.015 bitcoin.  If you want to accept any number of bitcoins to go back to the request payment tab and create a new payment request but leave the ‘Amount’ portion blank.  It will generate a QR code that scans directly to a public key.  If you save or print out the QR code, you can shutdown your bitcoin core wallet and accept bitcoin anywhere in the world simply by showing people the QR code image.  You can check the balance of your bitcoin address from any computer without opening the bitcoin core wallet and verify any bitcoin transaction that you are expecting from somebody simply by knowing the public key.  The simplest way is to go to blockchain.info and search your bitcoin public key.  Here is a direct link to check my balance:

https://blockchain.info/address/1Q3tcw3zkFgwF5Tf1XFX9teZHqk4dqhdGn

If you loaded up your wallet for this bitcoin core tutorial, take a moment to find something you want to buy with bitcoin.  Spendabit.co is a great place to start.  When you checkout the receiving party will give you their bitcoin address and the total that you need to send. Go to the send tab in Bitcoin Core, and fill in the information.  Label the transaction with what you purchased or who you sent the money to.

Sending Bitcoin Payment

Once you click send you will be prompted for your password.  This is where you enter the password that you encrypted your wallet with.

Bitcoin Transaction Fee

Most wallets will ask you to confirm your transaction details once more before it sends.  They will also notify you of applicable transaction fees and the total bitcoin that will be deducted from your wallet balance.  The transaction fees go directly to the bitcoin miners who work hard to keep the bitcoin network strong.  You can choose not to pay a fee, but if you do they may push your transaction aside and not process it.  To ensure your payment is sent quickly, pay the small fee, I’m doing it just for this bitcoin core tutorial.  Right now a bitcoin transaction only costs about $0.03 USD.  For that small fee you can send any amount of bitcoin to any person in the world any time you want.

Now that you have sent some bitcoin, lets check the transaction progress.  Go to you transaction page right click on the payment that you just sent.  Copy the Transaction ID, then go to blockchain.info and do a search for it. Here is a link to mine:  https://blockchain.info/tx/e15f2c37fb69e96f91f550feb00108f997616085b1d5b2ab9ae3660c777a5e98

Bitcoin Transaction Details

Now you can see all the details of the transaction and confirm that is has been processed.  You can send this link as proof that you have paid someone what you owed.

 

One thing you must remember from this bitcoin core tutorial is the Change Address.  A change address is a newly generated bitcoin address that holds the remainder of your bitcoins after you process a transaction.  This is why you have to backup your wallet again after you send bitcoins.  If my wallet was corrupted and I had to restore it from an old backup, my new balance would be 0.00 BTC instead of 0.0049 because the old backup doesn’t contain the private key for my new change address.  That money could be lost forever – backup your wallets.

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