Can a cryptocurrency actually contribute to a company's profits? Tesla apparently believes so. Tesla Q3 profit rose by $80 million thanks to its Bitcoin holdings. This illustrates how digital assets are beginning to have a larger place in corporate finances.
As of September 30, Elon Musk's company held 11,509 BTC worth $1.315 billion. They were worth $1.235 billion three months before. The company did not sell or purchase additional coins during this period; the profit resulted solely from higher BTC prices.
Firm's $80 million profit was also facilitated by new accounting regulations. The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) now permits companies to value digital assets at fair market value quarterly. Companies used to write down crypto to its lowest level, even if later prices rebounded.
This shift allows Tesla to report Bitcoin gains outright on its income. Nevertheless, the firm's overall adjusted profit per share fell short at $0.50, which was less than the $0.55 that analysts predicted. Conversely, the organisation recorded a revenue record of $28.1 billion, surpassing forecasts of $26.36 billion.
Despite the Bitcoin profit, Tesla's stock fell some 1.5% in after-hours trading. Investors are focused on the larger picture: overall profits, not only crypto profits.
Tesla's profits declined 37% from last year, due in part to increased costs. Tariffs on auto parts and raw materials tacked on some $400 million in cost. Research and development spending particularly in artificial intelligence and robotics also weighed on profits.
The majority of Tesla's sales came from vehicle sales. In the United States, customers flocked to take advantage of a federal tax credit of as much as $7,500 before it ended. Tesla also introduced a six-seat Model Y, which sold well in China, and sold incentives such as five-year interest-free loans and insurance rebates.
Nevertheless, Tesla is competing fiercely with BYD, Ford, and Hyundai. Car sales might be the future of AI and robotics, but currently, they are Tesla's primary moneymaker.
Tesla's steady BTC holdings and $80 million gain from it, indicate a larger trend: increasingly, companies are viewing Bitcoin as an asset to be held in the corporate treasury.

Source: BitcoinTreasuriesNet
Tesla is one of the top public companies holding Bitcoin, with 11,509 BTC in its treasury.
By August 2025, companies collectively held 951,000 BTC, worth over $100 billion. Other big names include MicroStrategy, now called Strategy Inc., which holds 640,418 BTC. This shows that more companies are seeing this digital asset as a way to strengthen their finances.
Regulations such as FASB's fair-value reporting simplify the inclusion of BTC in the balance sheet.
Experts state that Tesla's profit from this crypto indicates that crypto is becoming a normal part of business funding. It may inspire more firms to look towards digital assets for the long run.
Tesla's Q3 profit demonstrates how this digital asset can be used to drive earnings, even when conventional profits are struggling. While auto sales remain the center of the company, crypto provides a new means by which Tesla can increase its financial strength and may prompt others to do the same.
Muskan Sharma is a crypto journalist with 2 years of experience in industry research, finance analysis, and content creation. Skilled in crafting insightful blogs, news articles, and SEO-optimized content. Passionate about delivering accurate, engaging, and timely insights into the evolving crypto landscape. As a crypto journalist at Coin Gabbar, I research and analyze market trends, write news articles, create SEO-optimized content, and deliver accurate, engaging insights on cryptocurrency developments, regulations, and emerging technologies.