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Are all UTXOs locked by an address spent in a transaction?


UTXO all sent to change address?Signing transactions with un/compressed keyStatic receive address instead of dynamic?Processing multiple transactions very fastWhere to find UTXO Metadata APIHow can you consolidate your personal UTXO set? (different wallet answers welcomed)what happens to UTXOs when a transaction output script is satisfied?How many change outputs are there in a Bitcoin transactionI seem to have too many unspent outputs for my given balance. What am I missing?Use UTXOs before transaction is signed/broadcasted













3















Imagine I have 2 UTXOs locked by my address, each of which allows me to spend 5 bitcoins.



If I subsequently want to send just 2 bitcoins to someone else, will both UTXOs be used as inputs in the transaction, where I now receive 8 BTC change as a single UTXO locked to my address, or as the value I want to spend can be covered by a single UTXO, is only one of the 5 BTC UTXOs spent by the transaction and I receive change in a new UTXO worth 3 BTC locked by my address. So now my address locks two UTXOs, one for 5 BTC which was not needed in this transaction, plus the change I just received for 3 BTC. Or something else?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • As an aside, this question helps exemplify why address reuse is very bad for privacy: the person you pay 2 BTC to will be able to see that you control an address that holds many UTXOs, rather than just seeing the single UTXO that you spent to pay them. So with address reuse, you grant anyone you transact with the ability to see a much larger portion of your financial history.

    – chytrik
    1 hour ago


















3















Imagine I have 2 UTXOs locked by my address, each of which allows me to spend 5 bitcoins.



If I subsequently want to send just 2 bitcoins to someone else, will both UTXOs be used as inputs in the transaction, where I now receive 8 BTC change as a single UTXO locked to my address, or as the value I want to spend can be covered by a single UTXO, is only one of the 5 BTC UTXOs spent by the transaction and I receive change in a new UTXO worth 3 BTC locked by my address. So now my address locks two UTXOs, one for 5 BTC which was not needed in this transaction, plus the change I just received for 3 BTC. Or something else?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





















  • As an aside, this question helps exemplify why address reuse is very bad for privacy: the person you pay 2 BTC to will be able to see that you control an address that holds many UTXOs, rather than just seeing the single UTXO that you spent to pay them. So with address reuse, you grant anyone you transact with the ability to see a much larger portion of your financial history.

    – chytrik
    1 hour ago
















3












3








3








Imagine I have 2 UTXOs locked by my address, each of which allows me to spend 5 bitcoins.



If I subsequently want to send just 2 bitcoins to someone else, will both UTXOs be used as inputs in the transaction, where I now receive 8 BTC change as a single UTXO locked to my address, or as the value I want to spend can be covered by a single UTXO, is only one of the 5 BTC UTXOs spent by the transaction and I receive change in a new UTXO worth 3 BTC locked by my address. So now my address locks two UTXOs, one for 5 BTC which was not needed in this transaction, plus the change I just received for 3 BTC. Or something else?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












Imagine I have 2 UTXOs locked by my address, each of which allows me to spend 5 bitcoins.



If I subsequently want to send just 2 bitcoins to someone else, will both UTXOs be used as inputs in the transaction, where I now receive 8 BTC change as a single UTXO locked to my address, or as the value I want to spend can be covered by a single UTXO, is only one of the 5 BTC UTXOs spent by the transaction and I receive change in a new UTXO worth 3 BTC locked by my address. So now my address locks two UTXOs, one for 5 BTC which was not needed in this transaction, plus the change I just received for 3 BTC. Or something else?







utxo transaction-input address-reuse coin-selection






share|improve this question









New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago









Murch

35.3k27115330




35.3k27115330






New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 hours ago









Simon O'HanlonSimon O'Hanlon

1184




1184




New contributor




Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.













  • As an aside, this question helps exemplify why address reuse is very bad for privacy: the person you pay 2 BTC to will be able to see that you control an address that holds many UTXOs, rather than just seeing the single UTXO that you spent to pay them. So with address reuse, you grant anyone you transact with the ability to see a much larger portion of your financial history.

    – chytrik
    1 hour ago





















  • As an aside, this question helps exemplify why address reuse is very bad for privacy: the person you pay 2 BTC to will be able to see that you control an address that holds many UTXOs, rather than just seeing the single UTXO that you spent to pay them. So with address reuse, you grant anyone you transact with the ability to see a much larger portion of your financial history.

    – chytrik
    1 hour ago



















As an aside, this question helps exemplify why address reuse is very bad for privacy: the person you pay 2 BTC to will be able to see that you control an address that holds many UTXOs, rather than just seeing the single UTXO that you spent to pay them. So with address reuse, you grant anyone you transact with the ability to see a much larger portion of your financial history.

– chytrik
1 hour ago







As an aside, this question helps exemplify why address reuse is very bad for privacy: the person you pay 2 BTC to will be able to see that you control an address that holds many UTXOs, rather than just seeing the single UTXO that you spent to pay them. So with address reuse, you grant anyone you transact with the ability to see a much larger portion of your financial history.

– chytrik
1 hour ago












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















3














Transactions explicitly refer to which UTXOs they are spending.



You can construct a transaction which only spends one of the two 5-BTC UTXOs, and sends 2 BTC to the destination and 3 BTC to a (possibly new) address of yourself.



You can also construct a transaction which spends both, and sends 8 BTC back to yourself. Or it could have multiple outputs that send funds back to yourself, summing up to 8 BTC.



In short: there is nothing special about the two UTXOs that share an address, apart from the fact that the same key can sign for both - but it doesn't have to.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

    – Simon O'Hanlon
    2 hours ago











Your Answer








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1 Answer
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active

oldest

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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









3














Transactions explicitly refer to which UTXOs they are spending.



You can construct a transaction which only spends one of the two 5-BTC UTXOs, and sends 2 BTC to the destination and 3 BTC to a (possibly new) address of yourself.



You can also construct a transaction which spends both, and sends 8 BTC back to yourself. Or it could have multiple outputs that send funds back to yourself, summing up to 8 BTC.



In short: there is nothing special about the two UTXOs that share an address, apart from the fact that the same key can sign for both - but it doesn't have to.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

    – Simon O'Hanlon
    2 hours ago
















3














Transactions explicitly refer to which UTXOs they are spending.



You can construct a transaction which only spends one of the two 5-BTC UTXOs, and sends 2 BTC to the destination and 3 BTC to a (possibly new) address of yourself.



You can also construct a transaction which spends both, and sends 8 BTC back to yourself. Or it could have multiple outputs that send funds back to yourself, summing up to 8 BTC.



In short: there is nothing special about the two UTXOs that share an address, apart from the fact that the same key can sign for both - but it doesn't have to.






share|improve this answer
























  • Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

    – Simon O'Hanlon
    2 hours ago














3












3








3







Transactions explicitly refer to which UTXOs they are spending.



You can construct a transaction which only spends one of the two 5-BTC UTXOs, and sends 2 BTC to the destination and 3 BTC to a (possibly new) address of yourself.



You can also construct a transaction which spends both, and sends 8 BTC back to yourself. Or it could have multiple outputs that send funds back to yourself, summing up to 8 BTC.



In short: there is nothing special about the two UTXOs that share an address, apart from the fact that the same key can sign for both - but it doesn't have to.






share|improve this answer













Transactions explicitly refer to which UTXOs they are spending.



You can construct a transaction which only spends one of the two 5-BTC UTXOs, and sends 2 BTC to the destination and 3 BTC to a (possibly new) address of yourself.



You can also construct a transaction which spends both, and sends 8 BTC back to yourself. Or it could have multiple outputs that send funds back to yourself, summing up to 8 BTC.



In short: there is nothing special about the two UTXOs that share an address, apart from the fact that the same key can sign for both - but it doesn't have to.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 2 hours ago









Pieter WuillePieter Wuille

47.2k399158




47.2k399158













  • Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

    – Simon O'Hanlon
    2 hours ago



















  • Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

    – Simon O'Hanlon
    2 hours ago

















Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

– Simon O'Hanlon
2 hours ago





Thank you for this clear explanation of the wonderful flexibility of the UTXO model.

– Simon O'Hanlon
2 hours ago










Simon O'Hanlon is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.










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