Robert Kiyosaki is at it again. The “Rich Dad Poor Dad” author took to X on March 16, 2026, dropping some of the most aggressive price targets you’ll see from anyone with a mainstream platform. Bitcoin at $750,000. Ethereum at $95,000. Gold at $35,000 per ounce. Silver at $200. All within 12 months of the next market crash.
Robert Kiyosaki just posted his most aggressive price targets yet — and they’ll make your head spin.
That’s not a typo.
At current prices, Bitcoin was sitting at $74,215 on March 17, 2026. That means Kiyosaki’s target requires a 910.58% surge. Ethereum was at $2,320, needing a staggering 3,994.83% jump to reach $95,000. For context, that’s an 11-trillion-dollar market cap for Ethereum alone. Silver needs a 147.37% gain from $80.85. These aren’t optimistic projections. They’re jaw-dropping.
Kiyosaki’s thesis isn’t new. He’s been warning about a catastrophic bubble collapse since at least 2008, framing it as “when, not if.” His argument centers on government debt, currency devaluation, and inflation eroding fiat money. Hard assets like Bitcoin, Ethereum, gold, and silver sit outside traditional banking systems, which is exactly the point he’s making. When the system blows up, these are the lifeboats. He has gone so far as to describe current market conditions as the biggest financial bubble in history.
He’s personally bought Bitcoin at $67,000 and has said he’d buy more at $6,000. Make of that what you will.
Critics aren’t exactly lining up to applaud. His decade-long track record of missed crash calls is well-documented. The numbers, they say, lack any rigorous modeling. Bitcoin was also down 15.03% year-to-date in 2026 despite a 4.44% weekly gain. Not exactly the pre-crash moon setup his targets imply.
That said, his Bitcoin thesis isn’t entirely out in the cold. Institutional players like Bernstein have floated bullish long-term Bitcoin targets too. And the macro backdrop in 2026, including Fed rate signals and geopolitical noise, isn’t exactly boring. Proponents of Bitcoin often describe it as digital gold, a decentralized asset designed to hold value outside the reach of governments and central banks. Investors looking to manage exposure to this kind of volatility often turn to dollar-cost averaging, a strategy that involves buying fixed amounts at regular intervals regardless of price.
Kiyosaki’s forecasts might extend into 2027 depending on when the crash actually happens, since the timeline hinges on a collapse that hasn’t arrived yet. Whether it ever does is the real question nobody can answer.