Bitcoin’s mining difficulty just recorded a sharp downward reset, with the final adjustment landing even deeper than the 9.55% decline originally projected in a June 13 report. The retarget at block 953,568 on June 14, 2026 cut difficulty by 10.09%, making it the second-largest downward adjustment of the year and the 11th largest in Bitcoin’s history.
What the Reported 9.55% Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Drop Means
What to Know
- Pre-adjustment projection: A 9.55% drop, which would have been the second-largest downward reset of 2026.
- Final result: Difficulty fell 10.09% at block 953,568 on June 14, 2026, deeper than the estimate.
- Current difficulty: 124.93 T, down from 138.96 T in the prior epoch.
Galaxy Research confirmed the scale of the move, noting that Bitcoin recorded its 11th-largest downward difficulty adjustment ever.
Bitcoin just confirmed its 11th-largest downward difficulty adjustment ever: −10.09% (138.96T to 124.93T) at block 953,568,
Source: @glxyresearch on X
Why Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Is Falling
Block production had been running above target heading into the adjustment. Blockchain.info data showed average block intervals of 11.29 minutes, well above the 10-minute ideal, signaling that less hashpower was competing to mine blocks.
The original report tied the slowdown to a hashrate slide from around 1 ZH/s at the end of May to roughly 861 EH/s around June 10. That roughly 14% decline in active mining power over two weeks made a steep difficulty drop inevitable under the protocol’s automatic adjustment mechanism.
According to unconfirmed industry analysis, power reallocation toward AI and high-performance computing workloads may have contributed to the hashrate decline. However, no official network dataset directly quantifies that shift.
What the Adjustment Could Mean for Miners and the Bitcoin Network
A 10.09% difficulty drop means every active miner now has meaningfully better odds of finding a block with the same hardware. According to the original report, the pre-adjustment projection suggested that a drop of this magnitude could lift hashprice back above $30 per PH/s if price and fees remain stable, though that figure has not been independently verified.
Bitcoin’s difficulty mechanism is designed precisely for this cycle. When mining becomes unprofitable for some operators, they shut down, hashrate falls, difficulty adjusts downward, and the remaining miners become more profitable. This self-correcting mechanism has kept Bitcoin’s block production running for over 17 years.
The current difficulty reset underscores a period of adjustment for the mining sector. Whether the projected June 29 retarget delivers another steep decline will depend on how quickly hashrate stabilizes, or whether more miners continue powering down in the weeks ahead.
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.
