Bitcoin Difficulty Set For Another 3% Drop: What It Means for Miners and BTC Price

<a href="https://pricpr.com/btc-usd/">Bitcoin</a> Difficulty Set For Another 3% Drop: What It Means

Bitcoin mining is becoming easier: data suggests the network’s difficulty will decrease by about 3% this weekend. Here’s a look at what that might mean for Bitcoin.

Bitcoin Block Time Has Been Slower Than Expected Recently

Data from CoinWarz suggests the difficulty of mining Bitcoin will likely decrease in the next adjustment. “Difficulty” is a measure built into the Bitcoin network that determines how challenging it is for miners to add new blocks to the blockchain.

This metric updates roughly every two weeks as the network self-adjusts. The direction of the change – whether it increases or decreases – depends on the blockchain’s activity since the last update.

Satoshi designed the network to maintain a consistent block creation time of 10 minutes. If miners solve blocks faster than this average, the network automatically increases the difficulty of the puzzles they need to solve. Conversely, if block creation slows down, the difficulty is lowered to speed things up.

The network difficulty will be adjusted Friday night. Here are the details of that change.

Currently, it takes an average of 10.30 minutes to create a new block on the Bitcoin network. This is slightly slower than the target time, so the network will automatically lower the difficulty of mining by around 2.91%. This adjustment helps ensure blocks are created at a consistent rate and keeps miners operating efficiently.

This will be the second consecutive adjustment to lead to a decline in the Difficulty.

Recently, some miners have left the network, causing a decrease in its overall computing power. This is reflected in the Bitcoin Hashrate – a measure of total computing power – which has been trending downwards over the past week, as shown in the chart from Blockchain.com.

As a researcher tracking the Bitcoin mining industry, I’ve observed a likely connection between the recent drop in Bitcoin’s price – starting in the fourth quarter of 2025 – and an increasing number of miners leaving the network. This makes sense, because miners primarily earn revenue through block subsidies, which are distributed at a consistent rate in Bitcoin. The mining difficulty adjusts to maintain a fairly steady block creation time, meaning the biggest factor impacting a miner’s income is simply the price of Bitcoin in US dollars.

Although Bitcoin’s processing power initially stayed stable during the recent price drop, the continued low price seems to have caused some validators to reduce their contributions.

BTC Price

At the time of writing, Bitcoin is floating around $78,600, up 2.7% in the last 24 hours.

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2026-05-02 09:49