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    You are at:Home » Bitcoin mining difficulty just had its 11th-biggest drop ever
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    Bitcoin mining difficulty just had its 11th-biggest drop ever

    James WilsonBy James WilsonJune 14, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Bitcoin mining difficulty fell 10.09% after lower prices pushed weaker miners offline and slowed block production.

    Summary

    • Bitcoin’s 10.09% difficulty drop gave active miners more output after weaker operators paused machines offline.
    • Galaxy Research tied the adjustment to June’s Bitcoin price slide and a longer mining epoch.
    • Crypto.news reports show miners are redirecting power toward AI and high-performance computing revenue streams globally.

    Bitcoin difficulty records sharp June drop

    Bitcoin completed one of its largest downward mining difficulty changes at block 953,568. Galaxy Research data cited by WuBlockchain showed the difficulty fell from 138.96T to 124.93T. The move ranked as Bitcoin’s 11th-largest downward adjustment and the second-largest drop recorded so far this year.

    Mining difficulty controls how hard miners must work to add new Bitcoin blocks. It changes every 2,016 blocks to keep the network close to a 10-minute block time. When miners leave the network and blocks arrive too slowly, the system lowers difficulty so active miners can find blocks more easily.

    Source: CoinWarz
    Source: CoinWarz

    Miner margins tightened after Bitcoin price weakness

    The adjustment followed a weak start to June for Bitcoin. Galaxy Research said Bitcoin’s price fell about 15% during the month, which cut miner revenue and forced some operators to switch off less efficient machines. 

    “Bitcoin completed its 11th-largest downward difficulty adjustment,” WuBlockchain reported, citing Galaxy Research.

    According to Galaxy Research, Bitcoin completed its 11th-largest downward difficulty adjustment at block 953,568, with difficulty falling 10.09% from 138.96T to 124.93T. Galaxy said Bitcoin’s roughly 15% price decline in June squeezed miner margins, pushing some hashrate offline…

    — Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) June 14, 2026

    The longer mining cycle showed the scale of the slowdown. The previous epoch lasted 15.6 days instead of the usual target of about 14 days. That delay showed that less hashrate was competing for rewards before the network reset difficulty lower.

    During that stretch, the network produced blocks slower than planned, which is the condition that triggers a downward retarget under Bitcoin’s rules for miners.

    Active miners may see better output

    TheEnergyMag had earlier expected difficulty to fall by about 9.55%. The final adjustment came in deeper, at 10.09%. That drop may allow miners still running machines to produce more Bitcoin with the same active hashrate. It may also lift hashprice, or miner revenue per unit of computing power, back above $30 per PH/s.

    The relief may not help every operator equally. Miners with newer machines and lower power costs are better placed to gain from lower difficulty. Older rigs remain exposed if Bitcoin prices fall again or energy costs stay high. The adjustment gives miners breathing room, but it does not remove pressure from tight margins.

    AI data centers compete for mining power

    The hashrate decline also comes as more mining firms move power capacity toward high-performance computing and AI data centers. Crypto.news has reported several examples of this shift. Core Scientific plans to turn its Pecos, Texas Bitcoin mining site into a large AI data center campus, including the repurposing of 300 megawatts of mining power.

    TeraWulf also showed how the business mix is changing. The company reported $21 million in HPC hosting revenue in the first quarter of 2026, above its Bitcoin mining revenue for the same period. HIVE Digital has also announced a 320 MW AI infrastructure project near Toronto that is designed to host more than 100,000 GPUs.



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