Categories: Bitcoin Latest News

More Work, Less Reward: Bitcoin Mining Toughens As Price Sinks To $113K

Bitcoin’s network just got a lot tougher to mine while its price took a hit. According to data from CoinWarz, mining difficulty climbed to a record 127.6 trillion this week. At the same time, Bitcoin fell by 3%, touching an intraday low of $113,005 before edging back to $113,250 by 7:30 pm ET.

Mining Difficulty Hits All-Time High

Based on analysis, difficulty will drop by roughly 3% on August 9, bringing it down to nearly 124 trillion. That adjustment follows a routine cycle every 2,016 blocks, or about two weeks, where the protocol tweaks how hard it is to mine a block. Difficulty makes sure blocks come out at a pace the system can handle.

The challenge is tied to how much computing power, or hashrate, miners pour into the network. When more machines join, difficulty goes up. When some stop hashing, it comes down. In June, the difficulty slid to a low of 117 trillion, but it bounced back in late July and has been climbing since.

At the moment, blocks are taking about 10 minutes and 20 seconds each on average, a bit slower than the 10-minute goal. When times drift too far off, the next adjustment nudges difficulty up or down to reel block times back toward 10 minutes.

Miners Feel The Squeeze

Higher difficulty means miners need more energy and better gear just to break even. With Bitcoin’s price under pressure, some older or less efficient operations could face real losses. Reports have disclosed that only the sharpest setups will likely stay in business if this pairing of high difficulty and low prices lasts.

Mining firms track their costs closely. If electricity, hardware and maintenance bills outpace what they earn from block rewards, they may have to switch off rigs. The upcoming 3% ease in difficulty might let a few marginal players stick around a bit longer. Still, margins will be thin until the next major price move.

Price Tumbles And Recovers Slightly

Based on data, Bitcoin slipped to $113,005—a 3% drop—before finding some buying at lower levels. By early evening, it had rebounded to $113,250.

That quick swing highlights how mining and market moves feed off each other. When hopes of easier mining fade, price can wobble. When price dips, miners feel squeezed and may power down, which in turn can lead to easier difficulty again.

Featured image from Pexels, chart from TradingView

[#item_full_content]NewsBTCRead More

Recent Posts

Ethereum Smashes Resistance—Bitcoin Left Behind as Momentum Flips Bullish

Ethereum price started a fresh increase above $3,250. ETH is now consolidating gains and might…

6 minutes ago

Bitcoin Holds Near $92K as Selling Cools, but Demand Still Lags

ETF inflows have finally turned positive, but weak on-chain activity, defensive derivatives positioning, and negative…

1 hour ago

Bitcoin Price Shows Fresh Strength—Could This Spark a Rapid Rally?

Bitcoin price started a decent increase above $92,000. BTC is now consolidating gains and might…

1 hour ago

Bitcoin Treads Water At $90,000 — Market Braces For FOMC To End The Compression Phase

Bitcoin is currently holding steady, trading water around the critical $90,000 level as the market…

2 hours ago

Bitcoin Addresses Holding Over 0.1 BTC Haven’t Grown in Two Years, What Does This Mean?

Since Bitcoin’s launch, the number of addresses holding more than 0.1 BTC has climbed steadily…

5 hours ago

22-Year-Old Pleads Guilty in $263 Million Bitcoin and Crypto Theft

Bitcoin Magazine 22-Year-Old Pleads Guilty in $263 Million Bitcoin and Crypto Theft A 22-year-old California…

5 hours ago