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Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Set for Record Increase Following Hashrate Boom

Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Set for Record Increase Following Hashrate Boom

Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Nears Record High as Hashrate Surges Past 900 EH/s

Bitcoin’s mining difficulty is set to climb by over 4%, reaching a new record level of approximately 126.95 trillion (T), fueled by a rising hashrate and growing miner involvement, despite persistently low transaction fees.

The upcoming difficulty adjustment, expected within the next 100 blocks, will break the current all-time high of 123T. Starting 2025 at 109T, Bitcoin’s difficulty has steadily increased as more computing power joins the network, according to Coinwarz.

The network’s seven-day average hashrate has surged to 918 exahashes per second (EH/s), up from 840 EH/s just two weeks ago. This is close to the previous peak of 925 EH/s, indicating that mining power is approaching historic levels.

Transaction fees, however, remain modest. Currently, a high-priority transaction requires around 2 satoshis per virtual byte (sat/vB), about $0.30. Miners still prioritize transactions with higher fees to speed confirmations, but overall demand for block space remains low.

This divergence between growing mining infrastructure and muted transaction activity highlights a unique phase in Bitcoin’s evolution—one where network security and capacity grow robustly, even as on-chain usage remains subdued.

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