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Reading: Bitcoin is getting too expensive to mine profitably: What breaks first?
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The cryptonews hub > Blog > Trending News > Bitcoin is getting too expensive to mine profitably: What breaks first?
Trending News

Bitcoin is getting too expensive to mine profitably: What breaks first?

Crypto Team
Last updated: November 7, 2025 5:44 pm
Crypto Team
Published: November 7, 2025
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wp header logo 605 Bitcoin is getting too expensive to mine profitably: What breaks first?

With the spotlight this cycle fixed on corporate Bitcoin treasuries, ETF inflows, and shifting global liquidity, Bitcoin’s miners have become the overlooked backbone of the network.

Yet, as block rewards shrink and energy costs rise, many are being forced to reinvent themselves, branching into AI hosting, energy arbitrage, and infrastructure services, just to keep their rigs running and the chain secure.

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That dependency is evident in today’s data points. The seven-day hashrate sits near 1.12 zettahashes per second, with network difficulty at approximately 155 trillion.

Over the last 144 blocks, miners earned approximately 453 BTC in total rewards, equivalent to roughly $45 million, given a spot price of around $101,000.

Hashprice derivatives point to a constrained near-term revenue environment. Luxor’s forward curve implies about $43.34 per petahash per day for October, down from $47.25 in late September.

Fee demand remains choppy. Following the April 2024 halving spike, which was tied to the launch of Runes, with ViaBTC’s halving block capturing more than 40 BTC from subsidy and fees combined, baseline fees eased over the summer.

Cheap confirmations improve user experience in calm windows, although the security budget that miners collect then leans even more on the fixed subsidy.

A simple way to frame the next quarter is to treat fees in three regimes and map them to miner revenue, hashprice, and the attack-cost bar.

Using 144 blocks per day, a 3.125 BTC subsidy, network hashrate near 1.13×10⁹ TH/s, and spot price around $113,000, fees per block of 0.02 BTC, 0.50 BTC, and 5.00 BTC correspond to fee shares of about 0.6 percent, 13.8 percent, and 61.5 percent of miner revenue.

The daily security budget, defined as the subsidy plus fees across 144 blocks, ranges from roughly 453 BTC in the quiet case to 522 BTC on a moderate day and to 1,170 BTC during peak activity.

Extra fees per block add ΔF × 144 BTC to daily revenue, which, spread across network hashrate and converted at spot, lifts miner earnings by about $0.29, $7.2, and $72 per petahash per day across those scenarios.

Forwards near $43 per petahash per day mean that a moderate fee day adds a mid-teens percentage uplift to revenue, while a peak day resets unit economics.

With forwards around $ 43 per petahash per day, the gross power margin can be thin before considering operating and capital costs. A moderate fee day improves survival for marginal fleets, and repeated peaks can compensate for low-fee stretches by boosting cash generation.

A lower-bound, operating-expense view for a 51 percent attack assumes an attacker can source and operate hardware at S21-class efficiency.

Controlling 51 percent of 1.13 ZH/s at 17.5 J/TH implies a power draw of nearly 10.1 gigawatts. That is roughly 10,085 megawatt-hours per hour, which costs about $0.50 to $0.71 million per hour at 5 to 7 cents per kilowatt-hour.

This is a floor with unrealistic sourcing assumptions, and rental markets cannot currently supply the required capacity at that scale. It remains a useful order-of-magnitude marker, as per River’s explainer on 51 percent attacks.

An upper-bound, capital-anchored talking point scales from hardware counts. Owning 51 percent of today’s hashrate with 200 TH/s machines would require about 2.88 million Antminer S21s.

These bounds connect directly to fees.

Sustained higher fees raise miner revenue, difficulty, and equilibrium hashrate after adjustments, which in turn raises both the opex floor and the practical capital bar for an attacker.

Spikes from inscriptions or volatility can fund a large jump in the daily security budget, as halving day demonstrated, although they do not create a baseline.

The open question for the next quarter is whether protocol policy and wallet behavior can lift the fee floor without relying on cyclical mania.

Bitcoin Core v28 introduced one-parent-one-child package relay, enabling nodes to relay low-fee parent transactions when paired with a paying child through the child-pays-for-parent mechanism, even if the parent falls below the minimum relay fee threshold.

That reduces the risk of stuck transactions and allows miners to monetize block space that would otherwise be idle. The v3 and TRUC policy set adds a robust replace-by-fee feature for limited transaction topologies, which mitigates pinning and enables predictable fee bumping, crucial for Lightning channel operations and exchange batching.

The ephemeral anchors proposal introduces a standard anchor output that permits post-facto fee addition via CPFP without expanding the UTXO set. Together with Package RBF in simple 1P1C topologies and cluster-aware mempool work, these tools help miners discover profitable transaction clusters and enable wallets to pay for confirmation when necessary.

None of these changes print demand; however, they make fee bumping reliable, which tends to put a floor under fees as L2s and exchanges standardize flows.

The pool template policy is also worth watching. If more pools habitually include sub-1 sat/vB transactions in quiet periods, baseline fee floors can drift down, even as improved relay and RBF support compress confirmation times during busy windows by propagating fee-bumped clusters more effectively.

The near-term read, with hashrate near 1.13 ZH/s and forward around $43 per petahash per day, is that moderate fees move the economics enough to keep marginal fleets online while policy improvements work through wallets and pools.

At today’s parameters, increasing the average fees to 0.5 BTC per block would push the daily security budget to approximately 522 BTC, or roughly $52 million, at $101,000.

source

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