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TERM_DEF // UPGRADES_BIPS / BIP_11_MULTISIG_OUTPUTS
BIP 11
(MULTISIG OUTPUTS)
BIP 11 (Multisig Outputs). The original bare-multisig spec.

This page sits in the Upgrades & BIPs section — The proposal process and the major upgrades that shaped Bitcoin. Read on for what it is, why it exists, how it works under the hood, and what to watch out for.
BIP 11 (Multisig Outputs) — at a glance
UPGRADES
BIP 11 — "Multisig Outputs" is a proposal in the Script family, first published in 2011 with status final (fork/">soft fork). The original bare-multisig spec. Its technical mechanism: specifies the OP_CHECKMULTISIG output script and signature encoding. the canonical bare-multisig spec, largely superseded by P2SH-wrapped multisig
Why it exists
DESIGN
BIP 11 (Multisig Outputs) exists to solve a specific problem: standardise the original M-of-N multisig output format. Without a written, numbered spec, every wallet and node implementer would interpret the requirement differently — and Bitcoin's value depends on every implementation agreeing exactly. BIP-11 is the single source of truth for this concern, so any new client built today can match the behaviour of every client built since 2011.
Mechanism
HOW IT WORKS
Mechanically, BIP-11 specifies the OP_CHECKMULTISIG output script and signature encoding. Because this is a soft fork, old software accepts new behaviour without modification — but new behaviour is rejected if old software produces it. Adoption today: the canonical bare-multisig spec, largely superseded by P2SH-wrapped multisig.
1. Author drafts BIP-11 against the BIP-2 template — abstract, motivation, specification, rationale. 2. The text + a reference implementation are posted on the bitcoin-dev list and as a PR to bitcoin/bips. 3. Reviewers tear it apart: ambiguities, security concerns, edge cases, interaction with prior BIPs. 4. Once stable, the BIP editor merges it; it gets a number (BIP-11) and the status "draft" or "proposed". 5. Implementations land in Bitcoin Core / wallets / other clients. For consensus changes: activation parameters chosen. 6. After deployment + adoption, BIP-11 is promoted to "final"; deprecated proposals get "replaced" or "withdrawn".
BIP-11 — quick reference card
EXAMPLE
BIP number : 11 Title : Multisig Outputs Area : Script First published: 2011 Status : final Fork class : soft Motivation : standardise the original M-of-N multisig output format. Mechanism : specifies the OP_CHECKMULTISIG output script and signature encoding. Where it shows up : the canonical bare-multisig spec, largely superseded by P2SH-wrapped multisig. Read the spec : https://github.com/bitcoin/bips/blob/master/bip-0011.mediawiki
OPT-IN
No authority can force a BIP on anyone. Adoption depends entirely on whether the change is genuinely useful.
NUMBERED
Stable numeric reference — BIP-11 means the same thing across every wallet, miner, and node that has read this spec.
BIP-11 is a soft fork — it changes (or proposes to change) the rules every full node enforces.
DEPLOYED
Implementations of BIP-11 are in production. The behaviour is observable on mainnet today.
Things that catch people out
PITFALLS
  • BIP-11 is a soft fork — old clients accept new behaviour but don't enforce it. Validate against an upgraded node to be sure the rule is being checked.
  • Don't confuse "draft" / "proposed" / "final" status — read the BIP header before relying on it in production.
  • The BIP number is just an editorial counter — it doesn't imply correctness or stability. Always cross-reference with the latest bitcoin/bips repo.

TERMINOLOGY
BIP 11 (Multisig Outputs)
The original bare-multisig spec.
Segregated Witness (SegWit, BIP 141)
The 2017 upgrade separating witness-data/">witness data, fixing tx malleability, and introducing weight units.
Taproot (BIP 341)
The 2021 upgrade introducing key-aggregable schnorr-signatures/">Schnorr signatures and Merkleized script trees.
Tapscript (BIP 342)
Script-language updates accompanying Taproot — new opcodes, removed limits.
Schnorr (BIP 340)
The Schnorr signature spec adopted by Taproot.
BIP Process
The community workflow for proposing, discussing, and tracking changes to Bitcoin.
Soft Fork Activation
The mechanism (versionbits, MASF, UASF, Speedy Trial) by which soft forks turn on.
MASF (Miner-Activated Soft Fork)
Activation triggered by miner signaling in block versions.