AI Bots Split on DOGE’s 2026 Record Run: Odds Range 15%-45%

AI Bots Split on DOGE’s 2026 Record Run: Odds Range 15%-45%

> At a Glance

> – Dogecoin needs a 430% jump to beat its $0.74 all-time high

> – ChatGPT odds of a new 2026 peak: 35%-45%

> – Gemini calls a record “a miracle scenario”

> – Why it matters: Retail momentum and Elon Musk’s voice remain the coin’s biggest wild cards

Dogecoin’s 21% weekly surge has reignited talk of a record-breaking year, but four leading chatbots disagree on how high DOGE can climb.

Price Hurdle: The 430% Mountain

dogecoin

Trading just under $0.15, DOGE would have to rocket 430% to reclaim the $0.74 peak it hit in spring 2021.

ChatGPT says the coin’s deep liquidity and outsized retail appeal make “extreme runs” possible when the broader market heats up.

Bot-by-Bot 2026 Forecasts

AI Model New ATH Odds Max Expected Price
ChatGPT 35%-45%
Grok Low without “extraordinary catalysts” ~$0.50
Perplexity Unlikely this year $0.44
Gemini “Miracle scenario” Consolidation around current levels

Grok stresses that Elon Musk’s public support and sudden meme-coin manias are the key accelerators.

Perplexity agrees Musk’s comments could “positively impact valuation,” but sees the ceiling at $0.44 in 2026, with a fresh record more probable in 2027.

Gemini labels any 2026 breakout “a low-probability event,” forecasting a year of rebound and sideways action instead.

Key Takeaways

  • DOGE’s path to a new ATH hinges on broad crypto strength plus retail FOMO.
  • AI models place the chance of a record anywhere from remote to 45%.
  • Without a Musk-driven or market-wide frenzy, forecasts cluster below $0.50.

Whether the coin beats the odds or stalls, its fate remains tightly linked to Bitcoin, Ethereum, and the next viral tweet.

Author

  • My name is Amanda S. Bennett, and I am a Los Angeles–based journalist covering local news and breaking developments that directly impact our communities.

    Amanda S. Bennett covers housing and urban development for News of Los Angeles, reporting on how policy, density, and displacement shape LA neighborhoods. A Cal State Long Beach journalism grad, she’s known for data-driven investigations grounded in on-the-street reporting.

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