Bitcoin has logged a third consecutive difficulty cut, and even with miner revenues under pressure, the network’s computing muscle is still holding firm above the 1.1 zettahash per second (ZH/s) mark.
Bitcoin Hashrate Holds the Line as Difficulty Slides for the Third Time and Revenues Remain Tighter Than Ever
Miners have successfully kept the network from slipping below the 1 ZH/s threshold, equivalent to 1,000 exahash per second of total hashrate. As of this weekend, aggregate hashpower is moving along steadily at 1,125.48 EH/s. The uptick follows a modest 0.74% difficulty adjustment recorded this week at block height 927360.
Bitcoin miners have experienced three difficulty reductions since Nov. 12, yet the combined 5.06% pullback has not outweighed the 6.31% increase recorded on Oct. 29 at block height 921312. Even so, hashrate shows little sign of easing, a persistence that has accelerated block production. Data from Dec. 13 show the average block interval currently stands at 9 minutes 25 seconds.
Bitcoin’s total hashrate as of Dec. 13, 2025, via hashrateindex.com.
As a result, the next difficulty epoch is expected to trend higher, though it remains some distance away, with just 18% — or 369 of the 2,016 blocks — completed so far, leaving ample room for the final adjustment to diverge from the current projection of more than a 6% increase. Notably, the elevated hashrate and faster block intervals are unfolding even as miner revenue remains thin.
Read more: Google Trends Data Shows Bitcoin Quietly Holding Its Place as the Year Comes to a Close
The hashprice, or the expected value of a single petahash of hashrate, is 9.85% lower than it was 30 days ago on Nov. 13, 2025. At that point it stood at $42.70 per petahash per second (PH/s), and today it sits at $38.49, reflecting softer bitcoin prices and the fact that onchain fees now make up only a sliver of the block reward.
Over the past 24 hours, data from Luxor’s hashrateindex.com show onchain fees well below the 1% threshold, accounting for just 0.54% of a block reward during the period. Even so, miners are once again displaying their resilience, a reminder that this kind of pressure is far from unfamiliar territory. Time will tell whether pricing conditions improve for miners or whether added strain awaits as 2026 gets underway.
FAQ ⛏️
What is bitcoin’s current network hashrate? Bitcoin’s total hashrate is holding above 1.1 zettahash per second, with aggregate hashpower measured at about 1,125.48 exahash per second.
Why has bitcoin difficulty declined recently? Bitcoin difficulty has adjusted lower three times since Nov. 12 as mining conditions shifted, even while overall network hashrate remained elevated.
**How fast are bitcoin blocks being produced right now?**As of Dec. 13, average block times are running at roughly 9 minutes 25 seconds, faster than the 10-minute target.
**Why are bitcoin miners under revenue pressure in late 2025?**Lower bitcoin prices and minimal onchain fees, which recently made up just 0.54% of block rewards, have weighed on miner earnings despite high hashrate.
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Bitcoin Mining Revenue Remains Thin — Yet Hashrate Refuses to Blink
Bitcoin has logged a third consecutive difficulty cut, and even with miner revenues under pressure, the network’s computing muscle is still holding firm above the 1.1 zettahash per second (ZH/s) mark.
Bitcoin Hashrate Holds the Line as Difficulty Slides for the Third Time and Revenues Remain Tighter Than Ever
Miners have successfully kept the network from slipping below the 1 ZH/s threshold, equivalent to 1,000 exahash per second of total hashrate. As of this weekend, aggregate hashpower is moving along steadily at 1,125.48 EH/s. The uptick follows a modest 0.74% difficulty adjustment recorded this week at block height 927360.
Bitcoin miners have experienced three difficulty reductions since Nov. 12, yet the combined 5.06% pullback has not outweighed the 6.31% increase recorded on Oct. 29 at block height 921312. Even so, hashrate shows little sign of easing, a persistence that has accelerated block production. Data from Dec. 13 show the average block interval currently stands at 9 minutes 25 seconds.
Read more: Google Trends Data Shows Bitcoin Quietly Holding Its Place as the Year Comes to a Close
The hashprice, or the expected value of a single petahash of hashrate, is 9.85% lower than it was 30 days ago on Nov. 13, 2025. At that point it stood at $42.70 per petahash per second (PH/s), and today it sits at $38.49, reflecting softer bitcoin prices and the fact that onchain fees now make up only a sliver of the block reward.
Over the past 24 hours, data from Luxor’s hashrateindex.com show onchain fees well below the 1% threshold, accounting for just 0.54% of a block reward during the period. Even so, miners are once again displaying their resilience, a reminder that this kind of pressure is far from unfamiliar territory. Time will tell whether pricing conditions improve for miners or whether added strain awaits as 2026 gets underway.
FAQ ⛏️