Bitcoin Mining Difficulty Has Dropped Significantly—What Does This Mean?

Bitcoin (BTC) network mining difficulty experienced a significant drop in the latest adjustment. According to CloverPool data, the update, which occurred at block height 941,472, reduced mining difficulty by 7.76% to 133.79 trillion (T). This decrease stands out as the second largest difficulty reduction recorded so far in 2026.

The network’s current hashrate is approximately 933.51 EH/s, while some measurements show it hovering around 948 EH/s. Experts indicate that this weakening of the network may continue in the short term. Indeed, according to current data, a further decrease of approximately 0.39% is expected in the next difficulty adjustment, and the difficulty is projected to fall to 133.26 T.

In the latest difficulty adjustment, the average block time was recorded as 9 minutes and 32 seconds. This is close to the 10-minute block time target of the Bitcoin network, indicating that the transaction verification pace on the network is trying to stabilize.

An examination of previous period data reveals a strong increase in difficulty of up to 14.73% in February, followed by sharp declines. In particular, the 11.16% drop on February 7th and the recent 7.76% decline indicate a volatile period in the mining sector.

*This is not investment advice.