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What is the Lightning Network?

Bitcoin’s base layer is great for settlement, slow for buying coffee. Lightning is the fast lane built on top.

If every coffee purchase had to wait ten minutes for a block and pay a base-layer fee, Bitcoin would be a clunky way to buy a latte. That’s not a flaw — the base layer is designed for rock-solid settlement, like wire transfers between banks. For tiny everyday spending, there’s a second layer: Lightning.

The idea in one breath

Instead of writing every small payment onto the global ledger, Lightning lets people open a private payment channel, zip unlimited payments back and forth instantly, and only record the final balance on the Bitcoin blockchain when they’re done.

Settle on-chain. Spend on Lightning.

Why it’s great

  • Instant. Payments clear in well under a second.
  • Tiny fees. Often a fraction of a cent, which finally makes micro-payments sane.
  • Still Bitcoin. It’s the same coins, same units — just moving on a faster road.

The trade-offs

Lightning involves channels and liquidity, which add a little complexity behind the scenes. It’s designed for spending, not long-term storage — think of it as the cash in your pocket versus the savings in your vault. Most people keep the bulk of their stack on the base layer and a spending amount on Lightning.

The two-layer mental modelBase layer = settlement, security, savings. Lightning = speed, coffee, day-to-day. Same money, two gears.

The one thing to remember

Lightning sits on top of Bitcoin for instant, near-free payments — settling back to the base layer when needed.

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