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Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drops 7.7% to 133.79 Trillion — Sharpest Decline Since February

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Bitcoin’s mining difficulty dropped 7.76% to 133.79 trillion at block height 941,472 on March 20, marking the network’s sharpest single-epoch decline since a larger correction in early February.

The adjustment, the second-largest downward move of 2026, followed an epoch in which blocks arrived roughly every 12 minutes and 36 seconds, well above Bitcoin’s 10-minute target. The slower pace signaled that meaningful hash power had left the network during the prior 2,016-block window.

133.79T
Bitcoin mining difficulty, down 7.7% in its sharpest decline since February.

Difficulty had sat near 145 trillion in mid-March and roughly 148 trillion at the start of the year. The latest reset brings it to its lowest level since late 2025, according to CoinTelegraph reporting citing CloverPool data. The only steeper drop this year came on February 7, when difficulty fell more than 11%.

Hash Rate Retreat Triggered the Downward Adjustment

Bitcoin’s difficulty algorithm recalibrates every 2,016 blocks to keep average block times near 10 minutes. When fewer miners compete, blocks take longer, and the protocol responds by lowering the bar. The 12-minute-36-second average over the latest epoch confirms that substantial hash power stepped away.

The global hash rate retreated to approximately 943 EH/s, down from higher levels earlier in March. Post-halving economics are the primary pressure point: the April 2024 halving cut block rewards from 6.25 BTC to 3.125 BTC, and with Bitcoin trading near $70,460, miners operating older or less efficient hardware face margin compression that makes continued operation uneconomical.

Several major public miners, including Core Scientific, Marathon Holdings, Hut 8, and Cipher Mining, have been reallocating infrastructure resources toward AI data center operations. That pivot pulls hash power away from Bitcoin mining and redirects it toward higher-margin compute workloads, a trend that mirrors what happened during recent periods of market stress across the broader crypto sector.

Bitdeer offers the starkest example of miner distress in this cycle. The company liquidated its entire Bitcoin treasury of 943 BTC on February 21, leaving it with zero BTC holdings as of late March. That treasury wipeout came during the same difficulty era that produced the February correction.

What the Drop Means for Surviving Miners and Bitcoin’s Network

For miners that remain online, the 7.76% difficulty reduction is immediate relief. Each terahash of deployed power now produces more BTC per day than it did before the adjustment, improving unit economics for efficient operations even as macroeconomic uncertainty weighs on broader sentiment.

On-chain fee revenue offers little cushion. Transaction fees currently sit at just 1 to 2 sat/byte for the fastest confirmation, near-zero levels that reflect subdued network activity. With the Fear and Greed Index at 12 (Extreme Fear) and 24-hour trading volume at $21.17 billion, the fee market is not compensating for reduced block rewards.

Network security, measured by total hash rate, has temporarily declined. At 943 EH/s, the network is still enormously powerful by historical standards, but the retreat from earlier 2026 highs reflects a period of miner consolidation where institutional capital is flowing toward different parts of the crypto infrastructure stack.

The next difficulty adjustment is estimated around April 3, 2026. If the current hash rate of roughly 943 EH/s holds steady at the new 133.79 trillion difficulty level, block times should return closer to the 10-minute target, and the next adjustment would be relatively flat. A recovery in hash rate before then, potentially driven by improved miner margins at the lower difficulty, would push the next adjustment upward.

Whether the AI infrastructure pivot by major miners continues to pull hash power from Bitcoin, or whether lower difficulty lures opportunistic operators back online, will shape the trajectory of miner economics through the second quarter of 2026.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.

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Acklesverse

Jensen Ackles is a cryptocurrency analyst and Web3 researcher specializing in blockchain adoption, decentralized finance (DeFi), and digital asset market trends. His work focuses on analyzing emerging blockchain technologies, evaluating cryptocurrency market developments, and explaining complex digital finance topics for a global audience. He owns $1000 in Bitcoin (BTC). With a background in blockchain research and digital asset analysis, Jensen covers topics including cryptocurrency market movements, blockchain infrastructure, Web3 ecosystems, decentralized finance protocols, and emerging innovations in the digital economy. His analysis often explores how blockchain technology is reshaping finance, online communities, and global economic systems. At CoinLineup, Jensen writes in-depth articles about cryptocurrency market trends, blockchain technology developments, and investment insights within the Web3 space. His goal is to provide readers with clear, research-driven analysis that helps both beginners and experienced investors understand the rapidly evolving digital asset landscape. Jensen is particularly interested in the intersection of blockchain innovation, decentralized systems, and real-world adoption of Web3 technologies. His research and writing emphasize practical insights, industry trends, and long-term perspectives on the future of cryptocurrency and decentralized finance.

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