Bitcoin Hashprice Falls to Record Low as Network Hashrate Shows Early Signs of Pullback

Bitcoin’s hashprice has fallen to a new all-time low below $35 per petahash per second (PH/s), hit by the combination of bitcoin’s price drop and persistently high network difficulty.
BTC is trading near $83,000 as of Saturday, down more than 30% from its all-time high last month. The decline has wiped out all year-to-date gains and pushed mining economics deeper into the red. The slump comes on top of record hashrate and difficulty levels set earlier this month, which have further reduced the amount of bitcoin miners can produce per unit of hashrate.
However, there are now early signs that miners are beginning to scale back. Bitcoin’s seven-day moving hashrate average has slipped from about 1.124 zettahash per second (ZH/s) in mid-November to roughly 1.06 ZH/s, suggesting some operators may have already unplugged hardware as margins tighten.
At the current pace of block production, the network is on track for a negative difficulty adjustment of roughly 2% in about four days. The adjustment could deepen if hashrate continues to fall in the coming days.
The latest contraction in mining profitability follows months of low transaction-fee revenue and a rapid post-halving expansion in deployed hashrate since last year, leaving operators more exposed to market-driven swings in hashprice.
RELATED ARTICLES
MORE NEWS
Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Set for Biggest Drop Since 2021 China Ban
Feb 7, 2026

Bitcoin Hashprice Hits Record Low as BTC Falls Below $70,000
Feb 5, 2026

Bitcoin Hashrate Slides 14% From October Peak as Difficulty Set for Moderate Pullback
Jan 20, 2026

Bitcoin Difficulty Holds Firm, Pointing to Limited Miner Capitulation
Dec 25, 2025

Bitcoin Hashprice Sinks to 14-Month Low Below $40/PH/s as BTC Falls to $95K
Nov 17, 2025

