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Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drops 7.76% as Hashprice Struggles to Support Miners

source-logo  news.bitcoin.com 11 h
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As projections anticipated, Bitcoin’s difficulty adjusted downward at block height 941472, falling 7.76% and easing the path for miners to find blocks over the next two weeks. The network has now logged six difficulty adjustments this year, with the metric sitting nearly 10% below its level at the close of 2025.

Lower Bitcoin Difficulty Offers Temporary Relief

Bitcoin miners caught a break on Friday, a shift that arrives at a time when revenue has been running thin. At block 941472, the network’s difficulty fell 7.76%, declining from 145.04 trillion to 133.79 trillion. That places the current difficulty 9.76% below its level during the Dec. 24, 2025 epoch at block 929376, when it stood at 148.25 trillion for 2,016 blocks.

Even with the latest pullback, mining bitcoin remains highly demanding, requiring substantial hashpower and access to low-cost electricity to compete. A current difficulty reading of 133.79 trillion means the network’s proof-of-work (PoW) target is roughly 133.79 trillion times more difficult than the baseline set at difficulty 1, when Bitcoin first launched.

The six difficulty epochs of 2026. Bitcoin’s difficulty changes every two weeks or 2,016 blocks. Image source: cloverpool.com.

Mining revenue largely depends on $BTC’s market value, now more than ever. Hashprice, or the expected daily value of 1 petahash per second (PH/s) of raw hashrate, currently stands at $33.46 per PH/s. Data from hashrateindex.com shows the current hashprice is 10.94% lower than it was three months ago, yet 12.90% higher than 30 days ago, when it hovered near $29.64 per petahash.

Onchain fees aren’t offering much relief, accounting for just 0.68% of total rewards over the past day. Meanwhile, machines delivering roughly 500 terahash per second (TH/s) or more are projected to generate about $8.21 per day, rising to roughly $25.05 for units running above 1,000 TH/s, or 1 PH/s. That assumes an electricity rate near $0.04 per kilowatt-hour (kWh). Each additional cent paid for power eats into profit.

Machines producing around 100 terahash per second (TH/s) or less are either breaking even or operating at a loss at $0.04 per kWh. The 7.76% difficulty drop had been anticipated, and with $BTC prices offering little support to mining revenue, the adjustment was widely welcomed by mining participants across the network, both large and small.

Still, the adjustment offers only partial relief in a system where margins are tight and conditions shift quickly. Unless $BTC’s price strengthens or operating costs fall, miners remain tied to a narrow band between viability and pressure, with efficiency continuing to define who stays competitive.

FAQ 🔎

  • What is Bitcoin’s mining difficulty right now? Bitcoin’s mining difficulty is about 133.79 trillion following the latest adjustment at block 941472.
  • Why did Bitcoin’s mining difficulty drop? The 7.76% drop reflects lower network conditions going forward and reduced mining pressure until April 3, 2026.
  • Is $BTC mining profitable in the U.S.? Profitability depends on electricity costs, with rates near $0.04 per kWh or lower needed to stay competitive.
  • What is Bitcoin’s hashprice today? Bitcoin’s hashprice is around $33.46 per PH/s, shaping daily miner revenue expectations.
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