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.

Bitcoin Mining Revenue Remains Thin — Yet Hashrate Refuses to Blink 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.

Bitcoin Mining Revenue Remains Thin — Yet Hashrate Refuses to Blink

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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