Bitcoin holds the mark of around $116,000, so the network hashrate is steadily returning to record-breaking territory.
Despite losses in revenue, Bitcoin Miner brings network strength back to record-breaking levels
After climbing 976 Exahash (EH/s) per second, the network's computing power fell below the 900 EH/s threshold after just four days. As of Monday, August 18, 2025, the global hashrate had rebounded once more, reaching 966.08 EH/s.

Hashrate Network Data Source: HashrateIndex.com
This rebound has slipped 7% over the past five days, even if the lower prices lower mining revenues. On August 13th, the hashpris (estimated one petahash per second per second per day) was $60.61.
Today, it's $56.37 per PH/s. Bitcoin prices are not the only factor in the weight of miners. Transaction fees fall below 1% of block rewards, and on the last day you sit at just 0.54% of block rewards. Additionally, the climbing hashrate has increased the block interval, with an average time of nearly 10 minutes hovering.
This will result in an estimated difficulty adjustment for the future 0.13%, but that figure could easily shift by the time it arrives on August 22nd. The hashrate is 966 EH/s (EH/s) per second, and the network is only 10 EH/s.
While Bitcoin prices and mining revenues are changing, the efficiency of modern application-specific integrated circuits (ASIC) rigs is outstanding.