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Bitcoin’s network mining difficulty recorded its final adjustment of 2025, rising slightly to approximately 148.2 trillion.
Data indicates the next difficulty adjustment is expected on January 8, 2026, at block height 931,392.
Forecasts suggest the upcoming adjustment could lift mining difficulty to around 149 trillion.
Average Bitcoin block times are currently close to 9.95 minutes, slightly faster than the protocol’s 10-minute target.
Faster block production increases the likelihood of a difficulty rise to slow block creation back towards target levels.
Mining difficulty reached multiple all-time highs during 2025 amid periods of strong price appreciation.
Two sharp difficulty increases were recorded in September as Bitcoin rallied before the market downturn in October.
Rising difficulty reflects growing computational power being deployed across the Bitcoin network.
Higher difficulty means miners must commit additional energy and hardware resources to remain competitive.
This dynamic adds pressure to operators already facing high capital and operating costs.
Bitcoin’s difficulty adjustment mechanism recalibrates every 2,016 blocks, or roughly every two weeks.
The system responds automatically to changes in average block production speed.
When blocks are mined too quickly, difficulty increases to maintain consistent issuance.
When blocks slow, difficulty decreases to stabilise network performance.
This process ensures a predictable Bitcoin supply schedule over time.
The mechanism also protects the network from sudden centralisation risks.
Without difficulty adjustments, miners could rapidly deploy excess computing power to dominate block production.
Such concentration could expose the network to potential 51% attack scenarios.
A successful majority attack could enable double-spending and undermine trust in the network.
Even without an outright attack, dominant miners could accelerate block rewards and flood markets with BTC.
Excess selling pressure could negatively affect Bitcoin’s price stability.
Dynamic difficulty ensures no single participant can easily overwhelm the network.
The protocol therefore reinforces decentralisation by aligning difficulty with total network hashpower.
Analysts say rising difficulty in 2025 highlights both network strength and increasing miner competition.
As 2026 approaches, miners are preparing for tighter margins and continued operational challenges.
At the time of reporting, Bitcoin price was $88,108.79 .