How to Stay on Top of Crypto News Daily

AIDular Team·June 16, 2026·3 min read

The easiest way to stay on top of crypto news is to set up a daily digest that pulls headlines, price moves, and regulation updates straight to your inbox, so you check once instead of constantly.

Crypto doesn't sleep. Prices can move 10% before breakfast. A new regulation drops in Asia, a major exchange lists a token, or a hack hits the headlines, and if you find out six hours late, it feels like you missed the whole story. But refreshing Twitter and CoinGecko every twenty minutes isn't a solution either. It just eats your day.

Why Crypto News Is So Hard to Track

The problem is that crypto news is scattered. You need to watch:

  • Price action on tokens you care about
  • Regulatory news (SEC rulings, country-level bans or approvals)
  • Exchange updates (new listings, delistings, outages)
  • On-chain events (big wallet moves, protocol upgrades, hacks)
  • Macro news that affects crypto (Fed rate signals, dollar strength)

No single site covers all of this well. So most people end up with ten tabs open and still feel like they're missing things.

Build a Simple Daily Crypto Routine

You don't need to be glued to a screen. You need one summary, delivered to you, every morning.

Here's what a good daily crypto brief covers:

  • Top headlines for Bitcoin and Ethereum in the last 24 hours
  • Any major regulatory news globally
  • Notable price moves in altcoins (tokens other than Bitcoin and Ethereum)
  • Any protocol or network upgrades announced
  • Sources so you can read the full story if something matters to you

That brief should take five minutes to read, not fifty.

A Copy-Paste AIDular Prompt for Your Crypto Routine

AIDular lets you describe exactly what you want to track in plain English. It then searches the web on a schedule and emails you a clean, sourced report. Here's a prompt you can copy and use:

"Every morning at 7am, send me a crypto news brief covering: top Bitcoin and Ethereum headlines from the last 24 hours, any major regulatory news about crypto from the US, EU, or Asia, any significant price moves in the top 20 altcoins by market cap, and any exchange hacks, outages, or major listings. Include sources for each item."

Paste that into AIDular, pick daily, and you get a sourced morning brief without opening a single tab.

What to Do With Your Brief

Reading the brief is step one. A few habits that help:

  • Flag one or two stories that matter to you and read the full source article.
  • Note any regulatory news separately. Regulation is slow-moving but it tends to matter more long-term than daily price moves.
  • Don't act on every headline. Crypto news is noisy. Most big "breaking" stories are resolved or reversed within 48 hours.

If you follow a specific token closely, you can add a line to your AIDular prompt like "also include any news about [token name] or its development team." The more specific you are, the more useful the report.

Regulation Is the News You Really Can't Miss

Price swings are visible. But regulatory changes can reshape the whole market and they often get buried under louder headlines. A government approving a spot ETF, an exchange getting fined, or a country declaring crypto legal tender, these are the stories that have long-term impact.

Building regulation tracking into your daily brief means you won't miss it even on a busy day.


This post is general information only and is not financial advice. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.


If you want a daily crypto brief without the screen time, try AIDular free at aidular.com. Set it up in two minutes and your first report lands tomorrow morning.

Frequently asked questions

How do I keep up with crypto news without spending hours online?
Set up a daily email digest that covers price moves, regulatory news, and major headlines for the tokens you follow. Tools like AIDular can automate this so a sourced report lands in your inbox every morning.
What crypto news sources are most reliable?
CoinDesk, The Block, and Reuters crypto coverage are generally reliable. For regulatory news, official government and SEC announcements are the primary sources. Always check the original source before acting on a headline.
Is tracking crypto news daily really necessary?
It depends on how actively you follow the market. Even a quick daily brief helps you catch regulatory changes or major events early, which tend to matter more than short-term price noise.
Can I track specific altcoins, not just Bitcoin?
Yes. You can tailor your AIDular prompt to include any token by name, so your daily brief focuses on exactly what you care about rather than the whole market.

Try AIDular free

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