Prior to this adjustment, bitcoin’s difficulty was holding steady at 92.67 trillion between block heights 860,832 and 862,848. During that stretch, the hashprice—the estimated daily earnings per petahash per second (PH/s) of SHA256 hashpower—was valued at $41.12 per PH/s. Today, the spot hashprice has climbed to $45.79 per PH/s, showing an 11.35% increase as bitcoin (BTC) hovers near the $64,000 mark.
Bitcoin mining difficulty on Sept. 5, 2024. Source: coinwarz.com
Following the recent change, bitcoin’s difficulty now stands at 88.40 trillion. To put that into perspective, bitcoin mining is like a massive guessing game. Miners are repeatedly guessing numbers, aiming to find one lower than the target set by the network. The 88.40 trillion isn’t the number they’re guessing but reflects how tough the game is.
At this difficulty level, miners need to make an average of 88.40 trillion guesses before they hit the jackpot and discover the correct one. The bigger the number, the harder it is, making mining more time-consuming. But when the difficulty dips, like it did today, the task of finding blocks becomes just a little easier for bitcoin miners.
Currently, the network’s hashrate is cruising at 638.82 exahash per second (EH/s). Around 17 days ago, on Sept. 8, the hashrate hit a record 693 EH/s but dropped 72 EH/s by Sept. 16. Since then, 17.82 EH/s of computational power has returned. With the latest difficulty adjustment making it easier to mine blocks, the hashrate may continue to rise. Plus, the boost in bitcoin’s price—up 4.6% against the U.S. dollar this week—further sweetens the deal for miners.